4.6 Article

Novel Noninvasive Assessment of Microvascular Structure and Function in Humans

Journal

MEDICINE AND SCIENCE IN SPORTS AND EXERCISE
Volume 51, Issue 7, Pages 1558-1565

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1249/MSS.0000000000001898

Keywords

SKIN; MICROVASCULAR; OPTICAL IMAGING; LASER DOPPLER; CUTANEOUS

Categories

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [DP160104175, CE140100003]
  2. South Australian Government Department for Industry and Skills

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Introduction Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is a novel high-resolution imaging technique capable of visualizing in vivo structures at a resolution of similar to 10 mu m. We have developed specialized OCT-based approaches that quantify diameter, speed, and flow rate in human cutaneous microvessels. In this study, we hypothesized that OCT-based microvascular assessments would possess comparable levels of reliability when compared with those derived using conventional laser Doppler flowmetry (LDF). Methods Speckle decorrelation images (OCT) and red blood cell flux (LDF) measures were collected from adjacent forearm skin locations on 2 d (48 h apart), at baseline, and after a 30-min rapid local heating protocol (30 degrees C-44 degrees C) in eight healthy young individuals. OCT postprocessing quantified cutaneous microvascular diameter, speed, flow rate, and density (vessel recruitment) within a region of interest, and data were compared between days. Results Forearm skin LDF (13 +/- 4 to 182 +/- 31 AU, P < 0.05) and OCT-derived diameter (41.8 +/- 6.6 vs 64.5 +/- 6.9 mu m), speed (68.4 +/- 9.5 vs 89.0 +/- 7.3 mu m center dot s(-1)), flow rate (145.0 +/- 60.6 vs 485 +/- 132 pL center dot s(-1)), and density (9.9% +/- 4.9% vs 45.4% +/- 5.9%) increased in response to local heating. The average OCT-derived microvascular flow response (pL center dot s(-1)) to heating (234% increase) was lower (P < 0.05) than the LDF-derived change (AU) (1360% increase). Pearson correlation was significant for between-day local heating responses in terms of OCT flow (r = 0.93, P < 0.01), but not LDF (P = 0.49). Bland-Altman analysis revealed that between-day baseline OCT-derived flow rates were less variable than LDF-derived flux. Conclusions Our findings indicate that OCT, which directly visualizes human microvessels, not only allows microvascular quantification of diameter, speed, flow rate, and vessel recruitment but also provides outputs that are highly reproducible. OCT is a promising novel approach that enables a comprehensive assessment of cutaneous microvascular structure and function in humans.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available