Publication
Advanced Photonics Laboratory

Journal

Publication Journal
Aging-associated changes in cerebral vasculature and blood flow as determined by quantitative optical coherence tomography angiography
Year
2018
Author
Yuandong Li, Woo June Choi, Wei Wei, Shaozhen Song, Qinqin Zhang, Jialing Liu and Ruikang K. Wang
Journal
Neurobiology of Aging
Status
국외전문학술지 (SCIE)
Vol
70
Page
148-159
File
2018-5 Aging-associated changes in cerebral vasculature and blood flow as determined by quantitative optical coherence tomography angiography.pdf (2.8M) 24회 다운로드 DATE : 2020-11-18 18:19:53
Abstract : Normal aging is associated with significant alterations in brain’s vascular structure and function, which can lead to compromised cerebral circulation and increased risk of neurodegeneration. The in vivo examination of cerebral blood flow (CBF), including capillary beds, in aging brains with sufficient spatial detail remains challenging with current imaging modalities. In the present study, we use 3-dimensional (3-D) quantitative optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) to examine characteristic differences of the cerebral vasculatures and hemodynamics at the somatosensory cortex between old (16 months old) and young mice (2 months old) in vivo. The quantitative metrics include cortical vascular morphology, CBF, and capillary flow velocity. We show that compared with young mice, the pial arterial tortuosity increases by 14%, the capillary vessel density decreases by 15%, and the CBF reduces by 33% in the old mice. Most importantly, changes in capillary velocity and heterogeneity with aging are quantified for the first time with sufficiently high statistical power between young and old populations, with a 21% (p < 0.05) increase in capillary mean velocity and 19% (p  0.05) increase in velocity heterogeneity in the latter. Our findings through noninvasive imaging are in line with previous studies of vascular structure modification with aging, with additional quantitative assessment in capillary velocity enabled by advanced OCTA algorithms on a single imaging platform. The results offer OCTA as a promising neuroimaging tool to study vascular aging, which may shed new light on the investigations of vascular factors contributing to the pathophysiology of age-related neurodegenerative disorders.