The laser speckle method is a new form of tissue flowmetry that can analyze the interference pattern that appears when tissue is illuminated with a laser beam. During surgery for 100 cases of osteonecrosis of the femoral head, we measured the blood flow within the subchondral bone using this method.
Assessment of subchondral bone blood flow in the rabbit femoral condyle using the laser speckle method
β Scribed by Shinji Fukuoka; Takao Hotokebuchi; Kazumasa Terada; Nobuo Kobara; Hitoshi Fujii; Yoichi Sugioka; Yukihide Iwamoto
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 762 KB
- Volume
- 17
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0736-0266
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
The laser speckle method is a new form of flowmetry that can obtain a twoβdimensional distribution of blood flow in tissue. This method is a noncontact, simple, and rapid technique that may aid in the diagnosis of osteonecrosis. We investigated whether the subchondral bone blood flow within the femoral condyles of rabbits could be measured by the laser speckle method. The hydrogen washout method was chosen as a comparison technique because of its ability to allow repetitive measurements of blood flow in various conditions in one rabbit and because of its realiability which already has been established. We simultaneously measured the bone blood flow in 20 femoral condyles of 10 rabbits with the laser speckle and hydrogen washout methods and found a significant correlation between the blood flow levels with use of these two methods. For the clinical application of the laser speckle method, we also investigated the influence of cartilage thickness on the measurements and the depth in the bone to which blood flow could be measured with this method. A cartilage thickness of 0.2 mm did not influence the measurement of the bone blood flow, and the depth in the bone to which the laser speckle method could be used was approximately 2 mm.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The laser speckle method allows the noncontact determination of skin blood flow and its dynamics from a distance of 5 cm. The method is based on the time dependency of the speckle pattern formed by the scattered light of a 5 mW He-Ne laser (632.8 nm). Utilizing the speckle intensity measured through