Integration of an optical coherence tomography (OCT) system into an examination incubator to facilitate in vivo imaging of cardiovascular development in higher vertebrate embryos under stable physiological conditions

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Authors

  • Christoph M. Happel
  • Lars Thrane
  • Jan Thommes
  • Jörg Männer
  • T. Mesud Yelbuz

Research Organisations

External Research Organisations

  • Hannover Medical School (MHH)
  • Technical University of Denmark
  • University of Göttingen
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Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)425-435
Number of pages11
JournalAnnals of anatomy
Volume193
Issue number5
Publication statusPublished - 20 Oct 2011

Abstract

High-resolution in vivo imaging of higher vertebrate embryos over short or long time periods under constant physiological conditions is a technically challenging task for researchers working on cardiovascular development. In chick embryos, for example, various studies have shown that without appropriate maintenance of temperature, as one of the main environmental factors, the embryonic heart rate drops rapidly and often results in an increase in regurgitant flow. Hemodynamic parameters are critical stimuli for cardiovascular development that, for a correct evaluation of their developmental significance, should be documented under physiological conditions. However, previous studies were mostly carried out outside of an incubator or under suboptimal environmental conditions. Here we present, to the best of our knowledge, the first detailed description of an optical coherence tomography (OCT) system integrated into an examination incubator to facilitate real-time in vivo imaging of cardiovascular development under physiological environmental conditions. We demonstrate the suitability of this OCT examination incubator unit for use in cardiovascular development studies by examples of proof of principle experiments. We, furthermore, point out the need for use of examination incubators for physiological OCT examinations by documenting the effects of room climate (22. °C) on the performance of the cardiovascular system of chick embryos (HH-stages 16/17). Upon exposure to room climate, chick embryos showed a fast drop in the heart rate and striking changes in the cardiac contraction behaviour and the blood flow through the vitelline circulation. We have documented these changes for the first time by M-mode OCT and Doppler M-mode OCT.

Keywords

    Cardiovascular development, Examination incubator, Optical coherence tomography

ASJC Scopus subject areas

Cite this

Integration of an optical coherence tomography (OCT) system into an examination incubator to facilitate in vivo imaging of cardiovascular development in higher vertebrate embryos under stable physiological conditions. / Happel, Christoph M.; Thrane, Lars; Thommes, Jan et al.
In: Annals of anatomy, Vol. 193, No. 5, 20.10.2011, p. 425-435.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

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title = "Integration of an optical coherence tomography (OCT) system into an examination incubator to facilitate in vivo imaging of cardiovascular development in higher vertebrate embryos under stable physiological conditions",
abstract = "High-resolution in vivo imaging of higher vertebrate embryos over short or long time periods under constant physiological conditions is a technically challenging task for researchers working on cardiovascular development. In chick embryos, for example, various studies have shown that without appropriate maintenance of temperature, as one of the main environmental factors, the embryonic heart rate drops rapidly and often results in an increase in regurgitant flow. Hemodynamic parameters are critical stimuli for cardiovascular development that, for a correct evaluation of their developmental significance, should be documented under physiological conditions. However, previous studies were mostly carried out outside of an incubator or under suboptimal environmental conditions. Here we present, to the best of our knowledge, the first detailed description of an optical coherence tomography (OCT) system integrated into an examination incubator to facilitate real-time in vivo imaging of cardiovascular development under physiological environmental conditions. We demonstrate the suitability of this OCT examination incubator unit for use in cardiovascular development studies by examples of proof of principle experiments. We, furthermore, point out the need for use of examination incubators for physiological OCT examinations by documenting the effects of room climate (22. °C) on the performance of the cardiovascular system of chick embryos (HH-stages 16/17). Upon exposure to room climate, chick embryos showed a fast drop in the heart rate and striking changes in the cardiac contraction behaviour and the blood flow through the vitelline circulation. We have documented these changes for the first time by M-mode OCT and Doppler M-mode OCT.",
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AU - Männer, Jörg

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N1 - Funding information: We thank K. Reccius, at Hannover Medical School, for her technical assistance in embryo preparations for shell-less culture. This study was supported by research grants from German Research Foundation (DFG; YE 42/3-1) and German Foundation for Cardiac Research (DSHF; F/19/07) to Prof. Dr. med. T.M. Yelbuz and internal funding from the Dept. of Pediatric Cardiology and Intensive Care Medicine at Hannover Medical School.

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