Abstract

Laser speckle contrast imaging (LSCI) utilizes the speckle pattern of a laser to determine the blood flow in tissues. The current approaches for its use in a clinical setting require a camera system with a laser source on a separate optical axis making it unsuitable for minimally invasive surgery (MIS). With blood flow visualization, bowel viability, for example, can be determined. Thus, LSCI can be a valuable tool in gastrointestinal surgery. In this work, we develop the first-of-its-kind dual-display laparoscopic vision system integrating LSCI with a commercially available 10mm rigid laparoscope where the laser has the same optical axis as the laparoscope. Designed for MIS, our system permits standard color RGB, label-free vasculature imaging, and fused display modes. A graphics processing unit accelerated algorithm enables the real-time display of three different modes at the surgical site. We demonstrate the capability of our system for imaging relative flow rates in a microfluidic phantom with channels as small as 200 μm at a working distance of 1-5 cm from the laparoscope tip to the phantom surface. Using our system, we reveal early changes in bowel perfusion, which are invisible to standard color vision using a rat bowel occlusion model. Furthermore, we apply our system for the first time for imaging intestinal vasculature during MIS in a swine.

Highlights

  • Intraoperative evaluation of bowel viability is important during abdominal surgery [1]

  • We introduce a system integrating single-exposure Laser speckle contrast imaging (LSCI) with a commercially available laparoscope without the need for a laser source positioned at a different optical axis

  • Laparoscopic LSCI has a strong potential for clinical application in intestinal surgery

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Summary

Introduction

Intraoperative evaluation of bowel viability is important during abdominal surgery [1]. It is estimated that 1 out of every 1000 acute hospital admissions in the United States and Europe will suffer from acute mesenteric ischemia (AMI) [2]. Surgeons must resect a bowel with non-viable perfusion while leaving maximal healthy intestine. A missed, non-viable bowel segment can lead to sepsis and death, whereas removing excessive bowel may cause short bowel syndrome (SBS). Accurate determination of bowel perfusion and viability is essential

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