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Special Section Guest Editorial:Clinical near-infrared spectroscopy and imaging of the brain

Special Section Guest Editorial:Clinical near-infrared spectroscopy and imaging of the brain Marco Ferrari Joseph P. Culver Yoko Hoshi Heidrun Wabnitz Marco Ferrari, Joseph P. Culver, Yoko Hoshi, Heidrun Wabnitz, "Clinical near-infrared spectroscopy and imaging of the brain," Neurophoton. 3(3), 031401 (2016), doi: 10.1117/1.NPh.3.3.031401. Special Section Guest Editorial Clinical near-infrared spectroscopy and imaging of the brain Marco Ferrari University of L'Aquila Department of Physical and Chemical Sciences Via Vetoio, 67100, L'Aquila, Italy Joseph P. Culver Washington University School of Medicine Department of Radiology 4525 Scott Avenue, Campus Box 8225 St. Louis, Missouri 63110, United States Yoko Hoshi Hamamatsu University School of Medicine Institute for Medical Photonics Research Department of Biomedical Optics 1-20-1 Handayama, Higashi-ku, Hamamatsu Shizuoka 431-3192, Japan Heidrun Wabnitz Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB), Department of Biomedical Optics Abbestr. 2-12 10587 Berlin, Germany The Journal of Biomedical Optics (JBO) was founded in 1996. In the fourth issue of 1996 and in the subsequent first issue of 1997, JBO published a Special Section on Near Infrared Spectroscopy and Imaging of Tissues, guest edited by Marco Ferrari, David T. Delpy, and David A. Benaron.1 The special section included 12 articles on fetal- and infant-brain oximetry, muscle oximetry, and breast spectroscopy. In 2016, JBO celebrates its 20th anniversary. Throughout these two decades, JBO papers reported the tremendous progress in this field. A new Special Section on Clinical Near Infrared Spectroscopy and Imaging in JBO (including 7 reviews and 8 original articles) and this parallel Special Section on Clinical Near-Infrared Spectroscopy and Imaging of the Brain in Neurophotonics highlight these achievements. The discovery of the medical near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) goes back to 1977,2 when Frans Jöbsis reported that the relatively high degree of transparency of brain tissue in the near infrared range enables real-time noninvasive detection of hemoglobin (Hb) oxygenation using transillumination spectroscopy. Brain and muscle oximetry and functional NIRS3 (fNIRS) represent the most established clinical and/or basic research areas, but additional applications to other tissues and organs are emerging. This Neurophotonics special section includes 6 reviews and 8 original articles. In the last 20 years the clinical applications of brain oximetry have consistently increased. Gorm Greisen, one contributor of the 1996 special section,1 and his coauthors wrote an Outlook article focusing on the potential of cerebral tissue oximetry for clinical use to improve the outcome of preterm infants. They present a research agenda with three parallel components: randomized clinical trials, pathophysiologic studies to quantify the effectiveness of clinical interventions, and improved instrumentation. Moreau et al. © 2016 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE) investigate the feasibility of using frequency-domain NIRS to study adult brain oxygenation in the first few hours of stroke onset. The authors highlight the current technical limitations and future challenges in the development of this unique bedside monitoring tool for stroke. In the 1996 JBO special section,1 Claudia Robertson in collaboration with Britton Chance reported the use of NIRS to identify traumatic intracranial hematoma in 305 patients. In the present issue Robertson's group (Sen et al.) reviews the recent advances in the clinical applications of NIRS in traumatic brain injury. Papers from four different groups were published in 1993 demonstrating the ability of fNIRS to non-invasively measure Hb changes coupled with brain activation in humans.3 In 2014 Neuroimage dedicated a special issue to commemorate the first 20 years of fNIRS research, including 9 reviews and 49 contributed papers.4 In the present special section, 10 of the 15 articles are dedicated to various aspects of fNIRS in infants and adults. In their commentary article, Tachtsidis and Scholkmann highlight a significant problem that needs to be considered and addressed when performing fNIRS, namely the possibility of inadvertently measuring systemic hemodynamic responses in superficial layers that are not due to neurovascular coupling. They summarize the possible physiological origins of these issues and suggest ways to avoid and remove them. fNIRS has been largely applied on infants, although motion artifacts are difficult to prevent. Barker et al. propose a new method for correction of motion artifacts and serial correlations for real-time fNIRS suitable for infant studies. Emberson et al. isolate the effects of surface vascular signals in infant neuroimaging using short-distance optical channels. Goodwin et al. identify and optimize the factors affecting the quality of NIRS data from alert upright infants. It is demonstrated that a light-weight comfortable probe, a stimulus and rest protocol that maximizes attention, and adequate optical contact are essential for acquiring infant NIRS data. Jul­Sep 2016 Neurophotonics 031401-1 Vol. 3(3) Special Section Guest Editorial The lack of a diagnostic index is a problem that needs to be overcome in the diagnostics of autism spectrum disorder. Yanagisawa et al. propose an auxiliary diagnosis index for autism spectrum disorder based on fNIRS during working memory and nonworking memory tasks. Mihara and Miyai review the research on fNIRS application in neurorehabilitation. Topics include potential advantages and shortcomings of fNIRS for investigating the neural mechanism of functional recovery after brain damage and as therapeutic tool for rehabilitation including brain-computer interface and neurofeedback. Peng et al. first review the recent use of multichannel continuous electroencephalography (EEG) combined with fNIRS in epilepsy research and then describe applications to study focal seizures and interictal epileptiform discharges. Chalia et al. use simultaneous EEG and diffuse optical tomography (DOT) to investigate whether bursts of EEG activity in infants with hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy are associated with an observable cerebral hemodynamic response. DOT reveals patient-specific spatial distributions of the hemodynamic response that may be indicative of a complex pattern of cortical activation underlying discontinuous EEG activity that is not readily apparent in scalp EEG. Fantini et al. provide a comprehensive description of principles, methods, and clinical requirements of cerebral blood flow and cerebral autoregulation measurements and highlight the potentially important role that noninvasive optical methods can play in the assessment of neurovascular health. Diffuse correlation spectroscopy (DCS) measurements of blood flow rely on the sensitivity of the temporal autocorrelation function of diffusively scattered light to red blood cell mean square displacement. Boas et al. offer, for the first time, theoretical support for the empirically accepted ability of the DCS blood flow index to quantify tissue perfusion. Cassano et al. review the use of near-infrared and red radiation (photobiomodulation, PBM) for treating major depressive disorder. PBM appears to be a promising treatment for depression that is safe and well-tolerated. However, large randomized controlled trials are still needed to establish the safety and effectiveness of this new treatment. The guest editors believe that this special section and the parallel special section in JBO are valuable reading for scientists both inside and outside the biomedical optics community. Readers will get a glimpse of how NIRS technologies impact medicine today and what can be expected from developments of tomorrow's technologies. In the coming years, current generations of NIR instruments will migrate along the translational path toward clinical adoption as both the product engineering and use protocols are refined. However, while many aspects of NIRS technology have been tested for limits such as resolution, quantitative accuracy, field-of-view, depth sensitivity, wearability, portability and integration with other modalities, many of these individual demands are at odds with other performance measures. For example, the solutions to several performance specifications positively correlate with instrument weight and thus work against wearability. Thus the phasespace for optimizing and engineering real world NIRS instruments remains immense. In summary, NIRS has already provided many valuable insights in clinical research. While NIRS is on the verge of entering everyday clinical routine, the innovation yet to come is still brighter. The guest editors would like to thank all of the authors who contributed to this special section, as well as the reviewers whose hard work ensured its high quality. Finally, the guest editors express their gratitude to Lihong Wang, editor-in-chief of JBO, and David Boas, editor-in-chief of Neurophotonics, for giving us this opportunity, as well as JBO staff, for their support. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Neurophotonics SPIE

Special Section Guest Editorial:Clinical near-infrared spectroscopy and imaging of the brain

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Publisher
SPIE
Copyright
© 2016 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE)
Subject
Special Section on Clinical Near-Infrared Spectroscopy and Imaging of the Brain; Paper
ISSN
2329-423X
eISSN
2329-4248
DOI
10.1117/1.NPh.3.3.031401
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Marco Ferrari Joseph P. Culver Yoko Hoshi Heidrun Wabnitz Marco Ferrari, Joseph P. Culver, Yoko Hoshi, Heidrun Wabnitz, "Clinical near-infrared spectroscopy and imaging of the brain," Neurophoton. 3(3), 031401 (2016), doi: 10.1117/1.NPh.3.3.031401. Special Section Guest Editorial Clinical near-infrared spectroscopy and imaging of the brain Marco Ferrari University of L'Aquila Department of Physical and Chemical Sciences Via Vetoio, 67100, L'Aquila, Italy Joseph P. Culver Washington University School of Medicine Department of Radiology 4525 Scott Avenue, Campus Box 8225 St. Louis, Missouri 63110, United States Yoko Hoshi Hamamatsu University School of Medicine Institute for Medical Photonics Research Department of Biomedical Optics 1-20-1 Handayama, Higashi-ku, Hamamatsu Shizuoka 431-3192, Japan Heidrun Wabnitz Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB), Department of Biomedical Optics Abbestr. 2-12 10587 Berlin, Germany The Journal of Biomedical Optics (JBO) was founded in 1996. In the fourth issue of 1996 and in the subsequent first issue of 1997, JBO published a Special Section on Near Infrared Spectroscopy and Imaging of Tissues, guest edited by Marco Ferrari, David T. Delpy, and David A. Benaron.1 The special section included 12 articles on fetal- and infant-brain oximetry, muscle oximetry, and breast spectroscopy. In 2016, JBO celebrates its 20th anniversary. Throughout these two decades, JBO papers reported the tremendous progress in this field. A new Special Section on Clinical Near Infrared Spectroscopy and Imaging in JBO (including 7 reviews and 8 original articles) and this parallel Special Section on Clinical Near-Infrared Spectroscopy and Imaging of the Brain in Neurophotonics highlight these achievements. The discovery of the medical near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) goes back to 1977,2 when Frans Jöbsis reported that the relatively high degree of transparency of brain tissue in the near infrared range enables real-time noninvasive detection of hemoglobin (Hb) oxygenation using transillumination spectroscopy. Brain and muscle oximetry and functional NIRS3 (fNIRS) represent the most established clinical and/or basic research areas, but additional applications to other tissues and organs are emerging. This Neurophotonics special section includes 6 reviews and 8 original articles. In the last 20 years the clinical applications of brain oximetry have consistently increased. Gorm Greisen, one contributor of the 1996 special section,1 and his coauthors wrote an Outlook article focusing on the potential of cerebral tissue oximetry for clinical use to improve the outcome of preterm infants. They present a research agenda with three parallel components: randomized clinical trials, pathophysiologic studies to quantify the effectiveness of clinical interventions, and improved instrumentation. Moreau et al. © 2016 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE) investigate the feasibility of using frequency-domain NIRS to study adult brain oxygenation in the first few hours of stroke onset. The authors highlight the current technical limitations and future challenges in the development of this unique bedside monitoring tool for stroke. In the 1996 JBO special section,1 Claudia Robertson in collaboration with Britton Chance reported the use of NIRS to identify traumatic intracranial hematoma in 305 patients. In the present issue Robertson's group (Sen et al.) reviews the recent advances in the clinical applications of NIRS in traumatic brain injury. Papers from four different groups were published in 1993 demonstrating the ability of fNIRS to non-invasively measure Hb changes coupled with brain activation in humans.3 In 2014 Neuroimage dedicated a special issue to commemorate the first 20 years of fNIRS research, including 9 reviews and 49 contributed papers.4 In the present special section, 10 of the 15 articles are dedicated to various aspects of fNIRS in infants and adults. In their commentary article, Tachtsidis and Scholkmann highlight a significant problem that needs to be considered and addressed when performing fNIRS, namely the possibility of inadvertently measuring systemic hemodynamic responses in superficial layers that are not due to neurovascular coupling. They summarize the possible physiological origins of these issues and suggest ways to avoid and remove them. fNIRS has been largely applied on infants, although motion artifacts are difficult to prevent. Barker et al. propose a new method for correction of motion artifacts and serial correlations for real-time fNIRS suitable for infant studies. Emberson et al. isolate the effects of surface vascular signals in infant neuroimaging using short-distance optical channels. Goodwin et al. identify and optimize the factors affecting the quality of NIRS data from alert upright infants. It is demonstrated that a light-weight comfortable probe, a stimulus and rest protocol that maximizes attention, and adequate optical contact are essential for acquiring infant NIRS data. Jul­Sep 2016 Neurophotonics 031401-1 Vol. 3(3) Special Section Guest Editorial The lack of a diagnostic index is a problem that needs to be overcome in the diagnostics of autism spectrum disorder. Yanagisawa et al. propose an auxiliary diagnosis index for autism spectrum disorder based on fNIRS during working memory and nonworking memory tasks. Mihara and Miyai review the research on fNIRS application in neurorehabilitation. Topics include potential advantages and shortcomings of fNIRS for investigating the neural mechanism of functional recovery after brain damage and as therapeutic tool for rehabilitation including brain-computer interface and neurofeedback. Peng et al. first review the recent use of multichannel continuous electroencephalography (EEG) combined with fNIRS in epilepsy research and then describe applications to study focal seizures and interictal epileptiform discharges. Chalia et al. use simultaneous EEG and diffuse optical tomography (DOT) to investigate whether bursts of EEG activity in infants with hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy are associated with an observable cerebral hemodynamic response. DOT reveals patient-specific spatial distributions of the hemodynamic response that may be indicative of a complex pattern of cortical activation underlying discontinuous EEG activity that is not readily apparent in scalp EEG. Fantini et al. provide a comprehensive description of principles, methods, and clinical requirements of cerebral blood flow and cerebral autoregulation measurements and highlight the potentially important role that noninvasive optical methods can play in the assessment of neurovascular health. Diffuse correlation spectroscopy (DCS) measurements of blood flow rely on the sensitivity of the temporal autocorrelation function of diffusively scattered light to red blood cell mean square displacement. Boas et al. offer, for the first time, theoretical support for the empirically accepted ability of the DCS blood flow index to quantify tissue perfusion. Cassano et al. review the use of near-infrared and red radiation (photobiomodulation, PBM) for treating major depressive disorder. PBM appears to be a promising treatment for depression that is safe and well-tolerated. However, large randomized controlled trials are still needed to establish the safety and effectiveness of this new treatment. The guest editors believe that this special section and the parallel special section in JBO are valuable reading for scientists both inside and outside the biomedical optics community. Readers will get a glimpse of how NIRS technologies impact medicine today and what can be expected from developments of tomorrow's technologies. In the coming years, current generations of NIR instruments will migrate along the translational path toward clinical adoption as both the product engineering and use protocols are refined. However, while many aspects of NIRS technology have been tested for limits such as resolution, quantitative accuracy, field-of-view, depth sensitivity, wearability, portability and integration with other modalities, many of these individual demands are at odds with other performance measures. For example, the solutions to several performance specifications positively correlate with instrument weight and thus work against wearability. Thus the phasespace for optimizing and engineering real world NIRS instruments remains immense. In summary, NIRS has already provided many valuable insights in clinical research. While NIRS is on the verge of entering everyday clinical routine, the innovation yet to come is still brighter. The guest editors would like to thank all of the authors who contributed to this special section, as well as the reviewers whose hard work ensured its high quality. Finally, the guest editors express their gratitude to Lihong Wang, editor-in-chief of JBO, and David Boas, editor-in-chief of Neurophotonics, for giving us this opportunity, as well as JBO staff, for their support.

Journal

NeurophotonicsSPIE

Published: Jul 1, 2016

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