Journal of biophotonics | 2019

Monte Carlo Modelling of Photon Migration in Realistic Human Thoracic Tissues for Noninvasive Monitoring of Cardiac Hemodynamics.

 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Noninvasive monitoring of cardiac hemodynamics remains challenging in cardiovascular medicine. The possibility of noninvasive optical monitoring of cardiac hemodynamics was theoretically investigated in this study. By utilizing the Monte Carlo simulation method for voxelized media (MCVM) and Visible Chinese Human dataset, we quantified and visualized the photon migration in human thoracic region. The light fluence distribution was shown to reach heart tissue (~3cm depth under body surface) and 12% of the total fluence was absorbed by the myocardium. The proportion of spatial sensitivity distribution (SSD) in cardiac tissue to the total SSD reached 0.0195%. The portion of SSD increased following with cardiac diastole and diffuse reflectance deceased linearly with increasing cardiac volume. The optimal separation between the light source and detector was provided to be 3.5-4.0 cm for future development of noninvasive cardiac hemodynamics monitoring. A pilot experimental study was conducted to measure the diffuse reflectance light and fingertip photoplethysmography. These data suggest that the fluctuation period of near-infrared diffuse reflectance was consistent with the cardiac cycle, while the fluctuation features of the near-infrared signal was not consistent with that of photoplethysmography. All results indicate the great potential of noninvasive optical monitoring of myocardial hemodynamics. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1002/jbio.201900148
Language English
Journal Journal of biophotonics

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