Low bandwidth laser doppler blood flowmetry

Laser Doppler Blood Flowmetry (LDBF) has for several decades been applied to measure the flow of red blood cells in living tissue. Laser Doppler Perfusion Imaging (LDPI), a recent advancement which enables full-field blood flow visualisation, is gaining clinical acceptance in fields such as burn dia...

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Main Author: Carpenter, James
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/14267/
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author Carpenter, James
author_facet Carpenter, James
author_sort Carpenter, James
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Laser Doppler Blood Flowmetry (LDBF) has for several decades been applied to measure the flow of red blood cells in living tissue. Laser Doppler Perfusion Imaging (LDPI), a recent advancement which enables full-field blood flow visualisation, is gaining clinical acceptance in fields such as burn diagnostics. However, video-rate full-field imagers with appropriate sensor and processing capability require large financial and physical resources and this has prompted the development of under-specified systems. These systems may reduce the bandwidth and processing complexity but the question of how they perform compared to their fully specified counterparts remains. The advantages of these cheaper and often highly reconfigurable systems are recognised and so it is beneficial to ask whether any novel processing schemes can reduce the resultant error. Here a reduced bandwidth LDBF signal processing system has been modelled. Bayesian Inference has been used to show that the Pareto distribution is a likely model for the LDBF power spectrum, despite often being cited as exponential. Methods of evaluating microvascular blood flow have been described and compared. Additionally, one fast algorithm's effectiveness has been explained, and a novel and accurate method using the Hilbert transform has been presented. By understanding how aliasing modifies the frequency distribution, Bayesian Inference has been used to correct the blood flow output towards gold-standard values. The technique has been shown to correct the output of a low bandwidth CMOS camera imaging a rotating diffuser. Low bandwidth LDPI systems may be suitable for certain clinical applications where sensitivity to high flow is not required. However, where sensitivity to higher flow than baseline is required, e.g. in burn diagnostics, low bandwidth systems may underestimate the true blood flow leading to misdiagnosis. Nevertheless, low bandwidth systems could be used in this scenario if reliable post-processing is employed, such as that suggested by this thesis.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T18:36:08Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
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institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
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language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T18:36:08Z
publishDate 2014
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-142672025-02-28T11:29:45Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/14267/ Low bandwidth laser doppler blood flowmetry Carpenter, James Laser Doppler Blood Flowmetry (LDBF) has for several decades been applied to measure the flow of red blood cells in living tissue. Laser Doppler Perfusion Imaging (LDPI), a recent advancement which enables full-field blood flow visualisation, is gaining clinical acceptance in fields such as burn diagnostics. However, video-rate full-field imagers with appropriate sensor and processing capability require large financial and physical resources and this has prompted the development of under-specified systems. These systems may reduce the bandwidth and processing complexity but the question of how they perform compared to their fully specified counterparts remains. The advantages of these cheaper and often highly reconfigurable systems are recognised and so it is beneficial to ask whether any novel processing schemes can reduce the resultant error. Here a reduced bandwidth LDBF signal processing system has been modelled. Bayesian Inference has been used to show that the Pareto distribution is a likely model for the LDBF power spectrum, despite often being cited as exponential. Methods of evaluating microvascular blood flow have been described and compared. Additionally, one fast algorithm's effectiveness has been explained, and a novel and accurate method using the Hilbert transform has been presented. By understanding how aliasing modifies the frequency distribution, Bayesian Inference has been used to correct the blood flow output towards gold-standard values. The technique has been shown to correct the output of a low bandwidth CMOS camera imaging a rotating diffuser. Low bandwidth LDPI systems may be suitable for certain clinical applications where sensitivity to high flow is not required. However, where sensitivity to higher flow than baseline is required, e.g. in burn diagnostics, low bandwidth systems may underestimate the true blood flow leading to misdiagnosis. Nevertheless, low bandwidth systems could be used in this scenario if reliable post-processing is employed, such as that suggested by this thesis. 2014-07-09 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/14267/1/James_Carpenter_Thesis_Final.pdf Carpenter, James (2014) Low bandwidth laser doppler blood flowmetry. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Laser Doppler blood flowmetry Laser Doppler perfusion imaging burns and scalds treatment
spellingShingle Laser Doppler blood flowmetry
Laser Doppler perfusion imaging
burns and scalds
treatment
Carpenter, James
Low bandwidth laser doppler blood flowmetry
title Low bandwidth laser doppler blood flowmetry
title_full Low bandwidth laser doppler blood flowmetry
title_fullStr Low bandwidth laser doppler blood flowmetry
title_full_unstemmed Low bandwidth laser doppler blood flowmetry
title_short Low bandwidth laser doppler blood flowmetry
title_sort low bandwidth laser doppler blood flowmetry
topic Laser Doppler blood flowmetry
Laser Doppler perfusion imaging
burns and scalds
treatment
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/14267/