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Dive into the research topics where Heidrun Wabnitz is active.

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Featured researches published by Heidrun Wabnitz.


NeuroImage | 2012

The physiological origin of task-evoked systemic artefacts in functional near infrared spectroscopy.

Evgeniya Kirilina; Alexander Jelzow; Angela Heine; Michael Niessing; Heidrun Wabnitz; Rüdiger Brühl; Bernd Ittermann; Arthur M. Jacobs; Ilias Tachtsidis

A major methodological challenge of functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) is its high sensitivity to haemodynamic fluctuations in the scalp. Superficial fluctuations contribute on the one hand to the physiological noise of fNIRS, impairing the signal-to-noise ratio, and may on the other hand be erroneously attributed to cerebral changes, leading to false positives in fNIRS experiments. Here we explore the localisation, time course and physiological origin of task-evoked superficial signals in fNIRS and present a method to separate them from cortical signals. We used complementary fNIRS, fMRI, MR-angiography and peripheral physiological measurements (blood pressure, heart rate, skin conductance and skin blood flow) to study activation in the frontal lobe during a continuous performance task. The General Linear Model (GLM) was applied to analyse the fNIRS data, which included an additional predictor to account for systemic changes in the skin. We found that skin blood volume strongly depends on the cognitive state and that sources of task-evoked systemic signals in fNIRS are co-localized with veins draining the scalp. Task-evoked superficial artefacts were mainly observed in concentration changes of oxygenated haemoglobin and could be effectively separated from cerebral signals by GLM analysis. Based on temporal correlation of fNIRS and fMRI signals with peripheral physiological measurements we conclude that the physiological origin of the systemic artefact is a task-evoked sympathetic arterial vasoconstriction followed by a decrease in venous volume. Since changes in sympathetic outflow accompany almost any cognitive and emotional process, we expect scalp vessel artefacts to be present in a wide range of fNIRS settings used in neurocognitive research. Therefore a careful separation of fNIRS signals originating from activated brain and from scalp is a necessary precondition for unbiased fNIRS brain activation maps.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2001

Determining changes in NIR absorption using a layered model of the human head

J. Steinbrink; Heidrun Wabnitz; Hellmuth Obrig; Arno Villringer; Herbert Rinneberg

A theoretical approach is presented to determine absorption changes in different compartments of a layered structure from distributions of times of flight of photons. In addition resulting changes in spatial profiles of time-integrated intensity and mean time of flight are calculated. The capability of a single-distance, time-domain method to determine absorption changes with depth resolution is tested on a layered phantom. We apply this method to in vivo measurements on the human head (motor stimulation, Valsalva manoeuvre) and introduce a small-sized time-domain experimental set-up suitable for bedside monitoring.


Applied Optics | 2004

Time-resolved multidistance near-infrared spectroscopy of the adult head: intracerebral and extracerebral absorption changes from moments of distribution of times of flight of photons

Adam Liebert; Heidrun Wabnitz; Jens Steinbrink; Hellmuth Obrig; Michael Möller; Rainer Macdonald; Arno Villringer; Herbert Rinneberg

We report on multidistance time-resolved diffuse reflectance spectroscopy of the head of a healthy adult after intravenous administration of a bolus of indocyanine green. Intracerebral and extracerebral changes in absorption are deduced from moments (integral, mean time of flight, and variance) of the distributions of times of flight of photons (DTOFs), recorded simultaneously at four different source-detector separations. We calculate the sensitivity factors converting depth-dependent changes in absorption into changes of moments of DTOFs by Monte Carlo simulations by using a layered model of the head. We validate our method by analyzing moments of DTOFs simulated for the assumed changes in absorption in different layers of the head model.


Applied Optics | 2003

Time-domain optical mammography: initial clinical results on detection and characterization of breast tumors.

Dirk Grosenick; K. Thomas Moesta; Heidrun Wabnitz; Jörg Mucke; Christian Stroszczynski; Rainer Macdonald; Peter M. Schlag; Herbert Rinneberg

Mammograms of 35 patients suspected of breast cancer were taken along craniocaudal and mediolateral projections with a dual-wavelength scanning laser pulse mammograph measuring time-resolved transmittance. Among 26 tumors known from routine clinical diagnostics, 17 tumors were detected retrospectively in optical mammograms. Effective tumor optical properties derived from a homogeneous model were used to deduce physiological information. All tumors exhibited increased total hemoglobin concentration and decreased or unchanged blood oxygen saturation compared with surrounding healthy tissue. Scatter plots based on a pixelwise analysis of individual mammograms were introduced and applied to represent corelations between characteristic quantities derived from measured distributions of times of flight of photons.


NeuroImage | 2005

Bed-side assessment of cerebral perfusion in stroke patients based on optical monitoring of a dye bolus by time-resolved diffuse reflectance

Adam Liebert; Heidrun Wabnitz; Jens Steinbrink; Michael Möller; Rainer Macdonald; Herbert Rinneberg; Arno Villringer; Hellmuth Obrig

We present a minimally invasive optical method, that is, multi-channel time-domain diffuse near-infrared reflectometry of the head to assess cerebral blood perfusion that is applicable at the bed-side and repetitively at short intervals. Following intravenous injection of an ICG bolus, its transit through intra- and extracerebral tissue is monitored based on changes in moments of distributions of times of flight of photons, recorded with a 4-channel instrument simultaneously on both hemispheres. In healthy volunteers, we found that variance of distributions of times of flight of photons is well suited to assess latency and initial slope of the increase in absorption of intracerebral tissue due to the bolus. We successfully applied our method in two patients demonstrating a reversible cerebral perfusion deficit in an ischemic stroke patient who was treated by thrombolysis and in another patient with a permanent impaired unilateral perfusion due to ipsilateral internal carotid artery occlusion. In either case, we observed a difference in bolus transit time between the hemispheres. In the stroke patient, this difference resolved when re-evaluated 1 day after thrombolysis. The study demonstrates the necessity of a technique with sub-nanosecond time resolution to allow for depth discrimination if clinical perfusion monitoring of cerebrovascular diseases is addressed by optical methods.


Applied Optics | 2005

Performance assessment of photon migration instruments: the MEDPHOT protocol

Antonio Pifferi; Alessandro Torricelli; Andrea Bassi; P. Taroni; Rinaldo Cubeddu; Heidrun Wabnitz; Dirk Grosenick; Michael Möller; Rainer Macdonald; Johannes Swartling; Tomas Svensson; Stefan Andersson-Engels; Robert L.P. van Veen; Henricus J. C. M. Sterenborg; Jean-Michel Tualle; Ha Lien Nghiem; Sigrid Avrillier; Maurice Whelan; Hermann Stamm

We propose a comprehensive protocol for the performance assessment of photon migration instruments. The protocol has been developed within the European Thematic Network MEDPHOT (optical methods for medical diagnosis and monitoring of diseases) and is based on five criteria: accuracy, linearity, noise, stability, and reproducibility. This protocol was applied to a total of 8 instruments with a set of 32 phantoms, covering a wide range of optical properties.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2005

Time-domain scanning optical mammography : II. Optical properties and tissue parameters of 87 carcinomas

Dirk Grosenick; Heidrun Wabnitz; K. Thomas Moesta; Jörg Mucke; Peter M. Schlag; Herbert Rinneberg

Within a clinical trial on scanning time-domain optical mammography reported on in a companion publication (part I), craniocaudal and mediolateral projection optical mammograms were recorded from 154 patients, suspected of having breast cancer. Here we report on in vivo optical properties of the subset of 87 histologically validated carcinomas which were visible in optical mammograms recorded at two or three near-infrared wavelengths. Tumour absorption and reduced scattering coefficients were derived from distributions of times of flight of photons recorded at the tumour site employing the model of diffraction of photon density waves by a spherical inhomogeneity, located in an otherwise homogeneous tissue slab. Effective tumour radii, taken from pathology, and tumour location along the compression direction, deduced from off-axis optical scans of the tumour region, were included in the analysis as prior knowledge, if available. On average, tumour absorption coefficients exceeded those of surrounding healthy breast tissue by a factor of about 2.5 (670 nm), whereas tumour reduced scattering coefficients were larger by about 20% (670 nm). From absorption coefficients at 670 nm and 785 nm total haemoglobin concentration and blood oxygen saturation were deduced for tumours and surrounding healthy breast tissue. Apart from a few outliers total haemoglobin concentration was observed to be systematically larger in tumours compared to healthy breast tissue. In contrast, blood oxygen saturation was found to be a poor discriminator for tumours and healthy breast tissue; both median values of blood oxygen saturation are the same within their statistical uncertainties. However, the ratio of total haemoglobin concentration over blood oxygen saturation further improves discrimination between tumours and healthy breast tissue. For 29 tumours detected in optical mammograms recorded at three wavelengths (670 nm, 785 nm, 843 nm or 884 nm), scatter power was derived from transport scattering coefficients. Scatter power of tumours tends to be larger than that of surrounding healthy breast tissue, yet the 95% confidence intervals of both medians overlap.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2004

Concentration and oxygen saturation of haemoglobin of 50 breast tumours determined by time-domain optical mammography

Dirk Grosenick; Heidrun Wabnitz; K. Thomas Moesta; Jörg Mucke; Michael Möller; C. Stroszczynski; Jana Stößel; Bernhard Wassermann; Peter M. Schlag; Herbert Rinneberg

Using a dual-wavelength (670 nm, 785 nm) time-domain scanning instrument we have recorded optical mammograms of 93 patients suspected of having breast cancer which was subsequently assessed histologically. Among 65 histologically confirmed carcinomas, 54 were detectable in at least one of two optical mammograms recorded of each tumour-bearing breast in craniocaudal and mediolateral projection. Optical mammograms were based on photon counts in selected time windows of measured distributions of times of flight of photons. Optical properties of 50 carcinomas investigated at both wavelengths were derived by modelling the breast as partially homogeneous infinite slab with an embedded spherical inhomogeneity representing the tumour and by calculating the diffraction of photon density waves. In selected cases, additional information about the location of the tumour along the compression direction was used that was obtained from scans at selected offsets between source and detector optical fibres. A correlation plot of haemoglobin concentration and blood oxygen saturation of tumours and healthy tissue shows good separation between both kinds of tissue. The majority of carcinomas exhibited increased total haemoglobin concentration compared to healthy tissue.


Neuroscience Letters | 2000

Somatosensory evoked fast optical intensity changes detected non-invasively in the adult human head

Jens Steinbrink; Matthias Kohl; Hellmuth Obrig; Gabriel Curio; F. Syre; F. Thomas; Heidrun Wabnitz; Herbert Rinneberg; Arno Villringer

This work is the first to report optical intensity changes (DeltaI/I approximately 0.05%) with a latency between 60 and 160ms after electrical median nerve stimulation at 5Hz detected non-invasively through the intact adult human skull in volunteers. The signal is localised and reproducible when measuring at the same position on successive examinations. Compared to previous reports of fast optical changes in the human adult by a single group (Psychophysiology, 32 (1995) 505) the here reported changes are much smaller. They are in line with results from a photon transport calculation on a head model employing data from exposed cortical tissue. The origin of the signal found here is still unclear, however, they might be the non-invasive equivalent to the scattering changes found in exposed cortical tissue studies (J. Neurophysiol., 78 (1997) 1707).


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2005

Time-domain scanning optical mammography: I. Recording and assessment of mammograms of 154 patients

Dirk Grosenick; K. Thomas Moesta; Michael Möller; Jörg Mucke; Heidrun Wabnitz; Bernd Gebauer; C. Stroszczynski; Bernhard Wassermann; Peter M. Schlag; Herbert Rinneberg

Using a triple wavelength (670 nm, 785 nm, 843/884 nm) scanning laser-pulse mammograph we recorded craniocaudal and mediolateral projection optical mammograms of 154 patients, suspected of having breast cancer. From distributions of times of flight of photons recorded at typically 1000-2000 scan positions, optical mammograms were derived displaying (inverse) photon counts in selected time windows, absorption and reduced scattering coefficients or total haemoglobin concentration and blood oxygen saturation. Optical mammograms were analysed by comparing them with x-ray and MR mammograms, including results of histopathology, attributing a subjective visibility score to each tumour assessed. Out of 102 histologically confirmed tumours, 72 tumours were detected retrospectively in both optical projection mammograms, in addition 20 cases in one projection only, whereas 10 tumours were not detectable in any projection. Tumour contrast and contrast-to-noise ratios of mammograms of the same breast, but derived from measured DTOFs by various methods were quantitatively compared. On average, inverse photon counts in selected time windows, including total photon counts, provide highest tumour contrast and contrast-to-noise ratios. Based on the results of the present study we developed a multi-wavelength, multi-projection scanning time-domain optical mammograph with improved spectral and spatial (angular) sampling, that allows us to record entire mammograms simultaneously at various offsets between the transmitting fibre and receiving fibre bundle and provides first results for illustration.

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Adam Liebert

Polish Academy of Sciences

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