Application of Thinned-Skull Cranial Window to Mouse Cerebral Blood Flow Imaging Using Optical Microangiography |
| |
Authors: | Yuandong Li Utku Baran Ruikang K. Wang |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Department of Bioengineering, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, United States of America.; 2. Department of Electrical Engineering, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, United States of America.; Singapore Immunology Network, Singapore, |
| |
Abstract: | In vivo imaging of mouse brain vasculature typically requires applying skull window opening techniques: open-skull cranial window or thinned-skull cranial window. We report non-invasive 3D in vivo cerebral blood flow imaging of C57/BL mouse by the use of ultra-high sensitive optical microangiography (UHS-OMAG) and Doppler optical microangiography (DOMAG) techniques to evaluate two cranial window types based on their procedures and ability to visualize surface pial vessel dynamics. Application of the thinned-skull technique is found to be effective in achieving high quality images for pial vessels for short-term imaging, and has advantages over the open-skull technique in available imaging area, surgical efficiency, and cerebral environment preservation. In summary, thinned-skull cranial window serves as a promising tool in studying hemodynamics in pial microvasculature using OMAG or other OCT blood flow imaging modalities. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|