Diffusion characteristics of ethylene glycol in skeletal muscle


Autoria(s): Oliveira, Luís M.; Carvalho, Maria Inês; Nogueira, Elisabete M.; Tuchin, Valery V.
Data(s)

20/01/2016

20/01/2016

2014

Resumo

Part of the optical clearing study in biological tissues concerns the determination of the diffusion characteristics of water and optical clearing agents in the subject tissue. Such information is sufficient to characterize the time dependence of the optical clearing mechanisms—tissue dehydration and refractive index (RI) matching. We have used a simple method based on collimated optical transmittance measurements made from muscle samples under treatment with aqueous solutions containing different concentrations of ethylene glycol (EG), to determine the diffusion time values of water and EG in skeletal muscle. By representing the estimated mean diffusion time values from each treatment as a function of agent concentration in solution, we could identify the real diffusion times for water and agent. These values allowed for the calculation of the correspondent diffusion coefficients for those fluids. With these results, we have demonstrated that the dehydration mechanism is the one that dominates optical clearing in the first minute of treatment, while the RI matching takes over the optical clearing operations after that and remains for a longer time of treatment up to about 10 min, as we could see for EG and thin tissue samples of 0.5 mm.

Identificador

1083-3668

http://hdl.handle.net/10400.22/7415

10.1117/1.JBO.20.5.051019

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

SPIE

Relação

Journal of Biomedical Optics;Vol.20, Issue 5

http://biomedicaloptics.spiedigitallibrary.org/article.aspx?articleid=2086713

Direitos

openAccess

Palavras-Chave #Optical clearing #Agent diffusion #Diffusion coefficient #Collimated transmittance #Tissue dehydration #Refractive index matching
Tipo

article