2 resultados para Diffusion Weighted Imaging,Diffusion Tensor imaging,rene policistico,coefficiente di diffusione apparente

em Glasgow Theses Service


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This thesis describes the application of multispectral imaging to several novel oximetry applications. Chapter 1 motivates optical microvascular oximetry, outlines oxygen transport in the body, describes the theory of oximetry, and describes the challenges associated with in vivo oximetry, in particular imaging through tissue. Chapter 2 reviews various imaging techniques for quantitative in vivo oximetry of the microvasculature, including multispectral and hyperspectral imaging, photoacoustic imaging, optical coherence tomography, and laser speckle techniques. Chapter 3 describes a two-wavelength oximetry study of two microvascular beds in the anterior segment of the eye: the bulbar conjunctival and episcleral microvasculature. This study reveals previously unseen oxygen diffusion from ambient air into the bulbar conjunctival microvasculature, altering the oxygen saturation of the bulbar conjunctiva. The response of the bulbar conjunctival and episcleral microvascular beds to acute mild hypoxia is quantified and the rate at which oxygen diffuses into bulbar conjunctival vessels is measured. Chapter 4 describes the development and application of a highly novel non-invasive retinal angiography technique: Oximetric Ratio Contrast Angiography (ORCA). ORCA requires only multispectral imaging and a small perturbation of blood oxygen saturation to produce angiographic sequences. A pilot study of ORCA in human subjects was conducted. This study demonstrates that ORCA can produce angiographic sequences with features such as sequential vessel filling and laminar flow. The application and challenges of ORCA are discussed, with emphasis on comparison with other angiography techniques, such as fluorescein angiography. Chapter 5 describes the development of a multispectral microscope for oximetry in the spinal cord dorsal vein of rats. Measurements of blood oxygen saturation are made in the dorsal vein of both healthy rats, and in rats with the Experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) disease model of multiple sclerosis. The venous blood oxygen saturation of EAE disease model rats was found to be significantly lower than that of healthy controls, indicating increased oxygen uptake from blood in the EAE disease model of multiple sclerosis. Chapter 6 describes the development of video-rate red eye oximetry; a technique which could enable stand-off oximetry of the blood-supply of the eye with high temporal resolution. The various challenges associated with video-rate red eye oximetry are investigated and their influence quantified. The eventual aim of this research is to track circulating deoxygenation perturbations as they arrive in both eyes, which could provide a screening method for carotid artery stenosis, which is major risk-factor for stroke. However, due to time constraints, it was not possible to thoroughly investigate if video-rate red eye can detect such perturbations. Directions and recommendations for future research are outlined.

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A prospective randomised controlled clinical trial of treatment decisions informed by invasive functional testing of coronary artery disease severity compared with standard angiography-guided management was implemented in 350 patients with a recent non-ST elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI) admitted to 6 hospitals in the National Health Service. The main aims of this study were to examine the utility of both invasive fractional flow reserve (FFR) and non-invasive cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) amongst patients with a recent diagnosis of NSTEMI. In summary, the findings of this thesis are: (1) the use of FFR combined with intravenous adenosine was feasible and safe amongst patients with NSTEMI and has clinical utility; (2) there was discordance between the visual, angiographic estimation of lesion significance and FFR; (3). The use of FFR led to changes in treatment strategy and an increase in prescription of medical therapy in the short term compared with an angiographically guided strategy; (4) in the incidence of major adverse cardiac events (MACE) at 12 months follow up was similar in the two groups. Cardiac MRI was used in a subset of patients enrolled in two hospitals in the West of Scotland. T1 and T2 mapping methods were used to delineate territories of acute myocardial injury. T1 and T2 mapping were superior when compared with conventional T2-weighted dark blood imaging for estimation of the ischaemic area-at-risk (AAR) with less artifact in NSTEMI. There was poor correlation between the angiographic AAR and MRI methods of AAR estimation in patients with NSTEMI. FFR had a high accuracy at predicting inducible perfusion defects demonstrated on stress perfusion MRI. This thesis describes the largest randomized trial published to date specifically looking at the clinical utility of FFR in the NSTEMI population. We have provided evidence of the diagnostic and clinical utility of FFR in this group of patients and provide evidence to inform larger studies. This thesis also describes the largest ever MRI cohort, including with myocardial stress perfusion assessments, specifically looking at the NSTEMI population. We have demonstrated the diagnostic accuracy of FFR to predict reversible ischaemia as referenced to a non-invasive gold standard with MRI. This thesis has also shown the futility of using dark blood oedema imaging amongst all comer NSTEMI patients when compared to novel T1 and T2 mapping methods.