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Title: Estimation of cerebral oxy- and deoxy-haemoglobin concentration changes in a layered adult head model using near-infrared spectroscopy and multivariate statistical analysis. Author: Leung TS, Elwell CE, Delpy DT. Journal: Phys Med Biol; 2005 Dec 21; 50(24):5783-98. PubMed ID: 16333155. Abstract: The non-invasive measurement of cerebral oxy- (DeltaHbO(br)2) and deoxy-haemoglobin (DeltaHHb(br)) changes using near-infrared spectroscopy instruments is often affected by the absorption in the extracerebral layer. We have exploited the multivariate calibration (partial least squares, PLS) method to minimize the errors for a range of blood volume, oxygen saturation and extracerebral layer thicknesses. The changes in the mean time of flight of photons (Delta tau) and attenuation (DeltaA) on the surface of a 3D adult head model were simulated using a finite-element method based on the diffusion equation. The PLS was then performed to identify the optimal number of detectors, their positions and weightings, to optimize the estimation of DeltaHbO(br)2 and DeltaHHb(br). We define the 'nominal accuracy' as the accuracy of estimating DeltaHbO(br)2 and DeltaHHb(br) over a nominal range of extracerebral layer thicknesses and 'robustness' as the accuracy beyond the nominal range. The results showed that for one or two detectors, Delta tau performed better than DeltaA while using them together gave the best performance. When more detectors were used, the performances of using Delta tau, DeltaA or both together became comparable, showing that a larger number of detectors can compensate for the performance of a simple DeltaA measurement despite this measurement having a relatively lower sensitivity to intracerebral absorption changes.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]