Kenneth Solen, Sivaprasad Sukavaneshvar, Yu Zheng, Brian Hanrahan, Matthew Hall, Paul Goodman, Benjamin Goodman, Fazal Mohammad
Journal of Biomedical Optics, Vol. 8, Issue 01, (January 2003) https://doi.org/10.1117/1.1527934
TOPICS: Light scattering, Scattering, Blood, Mie scattering, Sensors, Particles, In vitro testing, Calibration, Light sources, Light
The characteristics and capabilities of a light-scattering microemboli detector (LSMD) are delineated by detailing its state-of-the-art configuration, by discussing the theoretical and empirical aspects of instrument calibration, and by summarizing various experimental studies that have benefited from this instrument. In the past, thromboembolism, which often results when blood contacts medical devices, has eluded scientific scrutiny due to the absence of instruments that could detect and quantify thromboemboli in circulating blood. More recently, the ability of the LSMD to provide continuous, noninvasive detection of thromboemboli in whole blood (meaning that the LSMD probe does not contact the blood) was exploited in various in vitro and ex vivo models to explore thromboembolic phenomena. Through this work, the LSMD evolved as a sensitive and an economical research tool for the study of thromboembolic phenomena.