Light: Science & Applications (Nov 2024)

Bessel beam optical coherence microscopy enables multiscale assessment of cerebrovascular network morphology and function

  • Lukas Glandorf,
  • Bastian Wittmann,
  • Jeanne Droux,
  • Chaim Glück,
  • Bruno Weber,
  • Susanne Wegener,
  • Mohamad El Amki,
  • Rainer Leitgeb,
  • Bjoern Menze,
  • Daniel Razansky

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41377-024-01649-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Understanding the morphology and function of large-scale cerebrovascular networks is crucial for studying brain health and disease. However, reconciling the demands for imaging on a broad scale with the precision of high-resolution volumetric microscopy has been a persistent challenge. In this study, we introduce Bessel beam optical coherence microscopy with an extended focus to capture the full cortical vascular hierarchy in mice over 1000 × 1000 × 360 μm3 field-of-view at capillary level resolution. The post-processing pipeline leverages a supervised deep learning approach for precise 3D segmentation of high-resolution angiograms, hence permitting reliable examination of microvascular structures at multiple spatial scales. Coupled with high-sensitivity Doppler optical coherence tomography, our method enables the computation of both axial and transverse blood velocity components as well as vessel-specific blood flow direction, facilitating a detailed assessment of morpho-functional characteristics across all vessel dimensions. Through graph-based analysis, we deliver insights into vascular connectivity, all the way from individual capillaries to broader network interactions, a task traditionally challenging for in vivo studies. The new imaging and analysis framework extends the frontiers of research into cerebrovascular function and neurovascular pathologies.