Phantom with Pulsatile Arteries to Investigate the Influence of Blood Vessel Depth on Pulse Oximeter Signal Strength

This paper describes a three-layer head phantom with artificial pulsating arteries at five different depths (1.2 mm, 3.7 mm, 6.8 mm, 9.6 mm and 11.8 mm). The structure enables formation of spatially and temporally varying tissue properties similar to those of living tissues. In our experiment, press...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hunor Santha, Norbert Stuban, Masatsugu Niwayama
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2012-01-01
Series:Sensors
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/12/1/895/
id doaj-2fd85182628e4a4ab4d57a7faea6745b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-2fd85182628e4a4ab4d57a7faea6745b2020-11-24T20:47:26ZengMDPI AGSensors1424-82202012-01-0112189590410.3390/s120100895Phantom with Pulsatile Arteries to Investigate the Influence of Blood Vessel Depth on Pulse Oximeter Signal StrengthHunor SanthaNorbert StubanMasatsugu NiwayamaThis paper describes a three-layer head phantom with artificial pulsating arteries at five different depths (1.2 mm, 3.7 mm, 6.8 mm, 9.6 mm and 11.8 mm). The structure enables formation of spatially and temporally varying tissue properties similar to those of living tissues. In our experiment, pressure pulses were generated in the arteries by an electronically controlled pump. The physical and optical parameters of the layers and the liquid in the artificial arteries were similar to those of real tissues and blood. The amplitude of the pulsating component of the light returning from the phantom tissues was measured at each artery depth mentioned above. The build-up of the in-house-developed pulse oximeter used for performing the measurements and the physical layout of the measuring head are described. The radiant flux generated by the LED on the measuring head was measured to be 1.8 mW at 910 nm. The backscattered radiant flux was measured, and found to be 0.46 nW (0.26 ppm), 0.55 nW (0.31 ppm), and 0.18 nW (0.10 ppm) for the 1.2 mm, 3.7 mm and 6.8 mm arteries, respectively. In the case of the 9.6 mm and 11.8 mm arteries, useful measurement data were not obtained owing to weak signals. We simulated the phantom with the arteries at the above-mentioned five depths and at two additional ones (2.5 mm and 5.3 mm in depth) using the Monte Carlo method. The measurement results were verified by the simulation results. We concluded that in case of 11 mm source-detector separation the arteries at a depth of about 2.5 mm generate the strongest pulse oximeter signal level in a tissue system comprising three layers of thicknesses: 1.5 mm (skin), 5.0 mm (skull), and > 50 mm (brain).http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/12/1/895/reflectance pulse oximetryoximeterphantomplethysmographpulsatileCW NIRS
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hunor Santha
Norbert Stuban
Masatsugu Niwayama
spellingShingle Hunor Santha
Norbert Stuban
Masatsugu Niwayama
Phantom with Pulsatile Arteries to Investigate the Influence of Blood Vessel Depth on Pulse Oximeter Signal Strength
Sensors
reflectance pulse oximetry
oximeter
phantom
plethysmograph
pulsatile
CW NIRS
author_facet Hunor Santha
Norbert Stuban
Masatsugu Niwayama
author_sort Hunor Santha
title Phantom with Pulsatile Arteries to Investigate the Influence of Blood Vessel Depth on Pulse Oximeter Signal Strength
title_short Phantom with Pulsatile Arteries to Investigate the Influence of Blood Vessel Depth on Pulse Oximeter Signal Strength
title_full Phantom with Pulsatile Arteries to Investigate the Influence of Blood Vessel Depth on Pulse Oximeter Signal Strength
title_fullStr Phantom with Pulsatile Arteries to Investigate the Influence of Blood Vessel Depth on Pulse Oximeter Signal Strength
title_full_unstemmed Phantom with Pulsatile Arteries to Investigate the Influence of Blood Vessel Depth on Pulse Oximeter Signal Strength
title_sort phantom with pulsatile arteries to investigate the influence of blood vessel depth on pulse oximeter signal strength
publisher MDPI AG
series Sensors
issn 1424-8220
publishDate 2012-01-01
description This paper describes a three-layer head phantom with artificial pulsating arteries at five different depths (1.2 mm, 3.7 mm, 6.8 mm, 9.6 mm and 11.8 mm). The structure enables formation of spatially and temporally varying tissue properties similar to those of living tissues. In our experiment, pressure pulses were generated in the arteries by an electronically controlled pump. The physical and optical parameters of the layers and the liquid in the artificial arteries were similar to those of real tissues and blood. The amplitude of the pulsating component of the light returning from the phantom tissues was measured at each artery depth mentioned above. The build-up of the in-house-developed pulse oximeter used for performing the measurements and the physical layout of the measuring head are described. The radiant flux generated by the LED on the measuring head was measured to be 1.8 mW at 910 nm. The backscattered radiant flux was measured, and found to be 0.46 nW (0.26 ppm), 0.55 nW (0.31 ppm), and 0.18 nW (0.10 ppm) for the 1.2 mm, 3.7 mm and 6.8 mm arteries, respectively. In the case of the 9.6 mm and 11.8 mm arteries, useful measurement data were not obtained owing to weak signals. We simulated the phantom with the arteries at the above-mentioned five depths and at two additional ones (2.5 mm and 5.3 mm in depth) using the Monte Carlo method. The measurement results were verified by the simulation results. We concluded that in case of 11 mm source-detector separation the arteries at a depth of about 2.5 mm generate the strongest pulse oximeter signal level in a tissue system comprising three layers of thicknesses: 1.5 mm (skin), 5.0 mm (skull), and > 50 mm (brain).
topic reflectance pulse oximetry
oximeter
phantom
plethysmograph
pulsatile
CW NIRS
url http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/12/1/895/
work_keys_str_mv AT hunorsantha phantomwithpulsatilearteriestoinvestigatetheinfluenceofbloodvesseldepthonpulseoximetersignalstrength
AT norbertstuban phantomwithpulsatilearteriestoinvestigatetheinfluenceofbloodvesseldepthonpulseoximetersignalstrength
AT masatsuguniwayama phantomwithpulsatilearteriestoinvestigatetheinfluenceofbloodvesseldepthonpulseoximetersignalstrength
_version_ 1716810061750206464