Anisotropic light propagation in human brain white matter

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Significance

Accurate modeling of light diffusion in the human brain is crucial for applications in optogenetics and spectroscopy diagnostic techniques. White matter tissue is composed of myelinated axon bundles, suggesting the occurrence of enhanced light diffusion along their local orientation direction, which however has never been characterized experimentally. Existing diffuse optics models assume isotropic properties, limiting their accuracy.

Aim

We aim to characterize the anisotropic scattering properties of human white matter tissue by directly measuring its tensor scattering components along different directions, and to correlate them with the local axon fiber orientation.

Approach

Using a time- and space-resolved setup, we image the transverse propagation of diffusely reflected light across two perpendicular directions in a ex vivo human brain sample. Local fiber orientation is independently determined using light sheet fluorescence microscopy (LSFM).

Results

The directional dependence of light propagation in organized myelinated axon bundles is characterized via Monte Carlo (MC) simulations accounting for a tensor scattering coefficient, revealing a lower scattering rate parallel to the fiber orientation. The effects of white matter anisotropy are further assessed by simulating a typical time-domain near-infrared spectroscopy measurement in a four-layer human head model.

Conclusions

This study provides a first characterization of the anisotropic scattering properties in ex vivo human white matter, highlighting its direct correlation with axon fiber orientation, and opening to the realization of quantitatively accurate anisotropy-aware human head 3D meshes for diffuse optics applications.

Article activity feed