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Dive into the research topics where Buyin Fu is active.

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Featured researches published by Buyin Fu.


Biomedical Optics Express | 2017

Fluorescence lifetime microscopy of NADH distinguishes alterations in cerebral metabolism in vivo

Mohammad A. Yaseen; Jason Sutin; Weicheng Wu; Buyin Fu; Hana Uhlirova; Anna Devor; David A. Boas; Sava Sakadžić

Evaluating cerebral energy metabolism at microscopic resolution is important for comprehensively understanding healthy brain function and its pathological alterations. Here, we resolve specific alterations in cerebral metabolism in vivo in Sprague Dawley rats utilizing minimally-invasive 2-photon fluorescence lifetime imaging (2P-FLIM) measurements of reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) fluorescence. Time-resolved fluorescence lifetime measurements enable distinction of different components contributing to NADH autofluorescence. Ostensibly, these components indicate different enzyme-bound formulations of NADH. We observed distinct variations in the relative proportions of these components before and after pharmacological-induced impairments to several reactions involved in glycolytic and oxidative metabolism. Classification models were developed with the experimental data and used to predict the metabolic impairments induced during separate experiments involving bicuculline-induced seizures. The models consistently predicted that prolonged focal seizure activity results in impaired activity in the electron transport chain, likely the consequence of inadequate oxygen supply. 2P-FLIM observations of cerebral NADH will help advance our understanding of cerebral energetics at a microscopic scale. Such knowledge will aid in our evaluation of healthy and diseased cerebral physiology and guide diagnostic and therapeutic strategies that target cerebral energetics.


Applied Optics | 2016

Optical coherence tomography imaging of capillary reperfusion after ischemic stroke

Jonghwan Lee; Yasemin Gursoy-Ozdemir; Buyin Fu; David A. Boas; Turgay Dalkara

Although progress has been made for recanalization therapies after ischemic stroke, post-treatment imaging studies show that tissue reperfusion cannot be attained despite satisfactory recanalization in a significant percentage of patients. Hence, investigation of microcirculatory changes in both surface and deep cortical levels after ischemia reperfusion is important for understanding the post-stroke blood flow dynamics. In this study, we applied optical coherence tomography (OCT) imaging of cerebral blood flow for the quantification of the microcirculatory changes. We obtained OCT microangiogram of the brain cortex in a mouse stroke model and analyzed the data to trace changes in the capillary perfusion level (CPL) before, during, and after the stroke. The CPL changes were estimated in 1 and 2 h ischemia groups as well as in a non-ischemic sham-operated group. For the estimation of CPL, a decorrelation amplitude-based algorithm was implemented and used. As a result, the CPL considerably decreased during ischemia but recovered to the baseline when recanalization was performed 1 h after ischemia; however, the CPL was significantly reduced when recanalization was delayed to 2 h after ischemia. These data demonstrate that ischemia causes microcirculation dysfunction, leading to a decreased capillary reperfusion after recanalization. Microcirculatory no-reflow warrants more rigorous assessment in clinical trials, whereas advanced optical imaging techniques may provide mechanistic insight and solutions in experimental studies.


PLOS ONE | 2018

Phasor analysis of NADH FLIM identifies pharmacological disruptions to mitochondrial metabolic processes in the rodent cerebral cortex

Carlos A. Gómez; Jason Sutin; Weicheng Wu; Buyin Fu; Hana Uhlirova; Anna Devor; David A. Boas; Sava Sakadžić; Mohammad A. Yaseen

Investigating cerebral metabolism in vivo at a microscopic level is essential for understanding brain function and its pathological alterations. The intricate signaling and metabolic dynamics between neurons, glia, and microvasculature requires much more detailed understanding to better comprehend the mechanisms governing brain function and its disease-related changes. We recently demonstrated that pharmacologically-induced alterations to different steps of cerebral metabolism can be distinguished utilizing 2-photon fluorescence lifetime imaging of endogenous reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) fluorescence in vivo. Here, we evaluate the ability of the phasor analysis method to identify these pharmacological metabolic alterations and compare the method’s performance with more conventional nonlinear curve-fitting analysis. Visualization of phasor data, both at the fundamental laser repetition frequency and its second harmonic, enables resolution of pharmacologically-induced alterations to mitochondrial metabolic processes from baseline cerebral metabolism. Compared to our previous classification models based on nonlinear curve-fitting, phasor–based models required fewer parameters and yielded comparable or improved classification accuracy. Fluorescence lifetime imaging of NADH and phasor analysis shows utility for detecting metabolic alterations and will lead to a deeper understanding of cerebral energetics and its pathological changes.


Journal of Biophotonics | 2018

Shear‐induced diffusion of red blood cells measured with dynamic light scattering‐optical coherence tomography

Jianbo Tang; Sefik Evren Erdener; Baoqiang Li; Buyin Fu; Sava Sakadzic; Stefan A. Carp; Jonghwan Lee; David A. Boas

Quantitative measurements of intravascular microscopic dynamics, such as absolute blood flow velocity, shear stress and the diffusion coefficient of red blood cells (RBCs), are fundamental in understanding the blood flow behavior within the microcirculation, and for understanding why diffuse correlation spectroscopy (DCS) measurements of blood flow are dominantly sensitive to the diffusive motion of RBCs. Dynamic light scattering-optical coherence tomography (DLS-OCT) takes the advantages of using DLS to measure particle flow and diffusion within an OCT resolution-constrained three-dimensional volume, enabling the simultaneous measurements of absolute RBC velocity and diffusion coefficient with high spatial resolution. In this work, we applied DLS-OCT to measure both RBC velocity and the shear-induced diffusion coefficient within penetrating venules of the somatosensory cortex of anesthetized mice. Blood flow laminar profile measurements indicate a blunted laminar flow profile and the degree of blunting decreases with increasing vessel diameter. The measured shear-induced diffusion coefficient was proportional to the flow shear rate with a magnitude of ~0.1 to 0.5 × 10-6  mm2 . These results provide important experimental support for the recent theoretical explanation for why DCS is dominantly sensitive to RBC diffusive motion.


Optics Letters | 2017

Capillary red blood cell velocimetry by phase-resolved optical coherence tomography.

Jianbo Tang; Sefik Evren Erdener; Buyin Fu; David A. Boas

We present a phase-resolved optical coherence tomography (OCT) method to extend Doppler OCT for the accurate measurement of the red blood cell (RBC) velocity in cerebral capillaries. OCT data were acquired with an M-mode scanning strategy (repeated A-scans) to account for the single-file passage of RBCs in a capillary, which were then high-pass filtered to remove the stationary component of the signal to ensure an accurate measurement of phase shift of flowing RBCs. The angular frequency of the signal from flowing RBCs was then quantified from the dynamic component of the signal and used to calculate the axial speed of flowing RBCs in capillaries. We validated our measurement by RBC passage velocimetry using the signal magnitude of the same OCT time series data.


Journal of Biomedical Optics | 2017

Impact of temporal resolution on estimating capillary RBC-flux with optical coherence tomography

Baoqiang Li; Hui Wang; Buyin Fu; Ruopeng Wang; Sava Sakadžić; David A. Boas

Abstract. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) has been used to measure capillary red blood cell (RBC) flux. However, one important technical issue is that the accuracy of this method is subject to the temporal resolution (Δt) of the repeated RBC-passage B-scans. A ceiling effect arises due to an insufficient Δt limiting the maximum RBC-flux that can be measured. In this letter, we first present simulations demonstrating that Δt=1.5  ms permits measuring RBC-flux up to 150  RBCs/s with an underestimation of 9%. The simulations further show that measurements with Δt=3 and 4.5 ms provide relatively less accurate estimates for typical physiological fluxes. We provide experimental data confirming the simulation results showing that reduced temporal resolution (i.e., a longer Δt) results in an underestimation of mean flux and compresses the distribution of measured fluxes, which potentially confounds physiological interpretation of the results. The results also apply to RBC-passage measurements made with confocal and two-photon microscopy for estimating capillary RBC-flux.


bioRxiv | 2018

Homogenization of capillary flow and oxygenation in deeper cortical layers correlates with increased oxygen extraction

Baoqiang Li; Tatiana V. Esipova; Ikbal Sencan; Kıvılcım Kılıç; Buyin Fu; Michèle Desjardins; Mohammad Moeini; Sreekanth Kura; Mohammad A. Yaseen; Frédéric Lesage; Leif Østergaard; Anna Devor; David A. Boas; Sergei A. Vinogradov; Sava Sakadžić

Our understanding of how capillary blood flow and oxygen distribute across cortical layers to meet the local metabolic demand is incomplete. We addressed this question by using two-photon imaging of microvascular oxygen partial pressure (PO2) and flow in the whisker barrel cortex in awake mice at rest. Our measurements in layers I-V show that the capillary red-blood-cell flux and oxygenation heterogeneity, and the intracapillary resistance to oxygen delivery, all decrease with depth, reaching a minimum around layer IV, while the depth-dependent oxygen extraction fraction is increased in layer IV, where oxygen demand is presumably the highest. Our findings suggest that homogenization of physiological observables relevant to oxygen transport to tissue is an important part of the microvascular network adaptation to a local brain metabolism increase. These results will inform the biophysical models of layer-specific cerebral oxygen delivery and consumption and improve our understanding of diseases that affect the cerebral microcirculation. IMPACT STATEMENT Homogenization of cortical capillary blood flow and oxygenation underpins an important mechanism, by which the microvascular network adapts to an increase in the local brain oxidative metabolism.


Optical Coherence Tomography and Coherence Domain Optical Methods in Biomedicine XXII | 2018

Capillary red blood cell velocimetry by phase-resolved optical coherence tomography

Jianbo Tang; Sefik Evren Erdener; Buyin Fu; David A. Boas

Quantitative measurement of blood flow velocity in capillaries is challenging due to their small size (around 5-10 μm), and the discontinuity and single-file feature of RBCs flowing in a capillary. In this work, we present a phase-resolved Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) method for accurate measurement of the red blood cell (RBC) speed in cerebral capillaries. To account for the discontinuity of RBCs flowing in capillaries, we applied an M-mode scanning strategy that repeated A-scans at each scanning position for an extended time. As the capillary size is comparable to the OCT resolution size (3.5×3.5×3.5μm), we applied a high pass filter to remove the stationary signal component so that the phase information of the dynamic component (i.e. from the moving RBC) could be enhanced to provide an accurate estimate of the RBC axial speed. The phase-resolved OCT method accurately quantifies the axial velocity of RBC’s from the phase shift of the dynamic component of the signal. We validated our measurements by RBC passage velocimetry using the signal magnitude of the same OCT time series data. These proposed method of capillary velocimetry proved to be a robust method of mapping capillary RBC speeds across the micro-vascular network.


Neural Imaging and Sensing 2018 | 2018

Measurement of shear-induced diffusion of red blood cells using dynamic light scattering-optical coherence tomography

Jianbo Tang; Sefik Evren Erdener; Baoqiang Li; Buyin Fu; Sava Sakadzic; Stefan A. Carp; Jonghwan Lee; David A. Boas

Dynamic Light Scattering-Optical Coherence Tomography (DLS-OCT) takes the advantages of using DLS to measure particle flow and diffusion within an OCT resolution-constrained 3D volume, enabling the simultaneous measurements of absolute RBC velocity and diffusion coefficient with high spatial resolution. In this work, we applied DLS-OCT to measure both RBC velocity and the shear-induced diffusion coefficient within penetrating venules of the somatosensory cortex of anesthetized mice. Blood flow laminar profile measurements indicate a blunted laminar flow profile, and the degree of blunting decreases with increasing vessel diameter. The measured shear-induced diffusion coefficient was proportional to the flow shear rate with a magnitude of ~ 0.1 to 0.5 × 10-6 mm2 . These results provide important experimental support for the recent theoretical explanation for why DCS is dominantly sensitive to RBC diffusive motion.


Neural Imaging and Sensing 2018 | 2018

Cerebral oxygenation and blood flow distributions along the capillary path in awake mice (Conference Presentation)

Baoqiang Li; Tatiana V. Esipova; Kıvılcım Kılıç; Mohammad Moeini; Sergei A. Vinogradov; Anna Devor; David A. Boas; Sava Sakadžić; Ikbal Sencan; Mohammad A. Yaseen; Buyin Fu; Sreekanth Kura; Frédéric Lesage

Cortical capillary blood flow and oxygenation are highly heterogeneous. Mapping absolute capillary blood flow and oxygenation along capillary path is a key step towards understanding how oxygen is transported and delivered in a complex microvascular network to enable adequate tissue oxygenation. In this work, we applied two-photon microscopic imaging of intravascular oxygen partial pressure (PO2) to measure both oxygen concentration and red blood cell (RBC) flux in cortical arterioles, capillaries, and venules. Imaging was performed in awake, head-restrained C57BL/6 mice (n=15), through a chronic sealed cranial window centered over the E1 whisker barrel. We obtained a detailed mapping of the resting state cortical microvascular PO2 in all arterioles and venules, and both PO2 and RBC flux in most capillaries down to 600 μm depth from the cortical surface (n=6,544 capillaries across all mice). Capillary RBC speed and density were also extracted and all measurements were co-registered with the microvascular angiograms. We characterized the distributions of capillary PO2 and flow as a function of branching order and cortical depth. The results show strong positive correlation between oxygenation and flow in the capillary segments, with an increased correlation in downstream capillaries. We have also observed homogenization of both oxygenation and flow in deeper cortical layers, which may imply a mechanism to improve oxygen delivery without increasing global blood flow in the area with increased metabolism.

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Baoqiang Li

École Polytechnique de Montréal

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Anna Devor

University of California

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Ikbal Sencan

University of California

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