Paper
8 February 2011 Improved calibration procedure for laser Doppler perfusion monitors
Ingemar Fredriksson, Marcus Larsson, Fredrik Salomonsson, Tomas Strömberg
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Commercial laser Doppler perfusion monitors are calibrated using the perfusion value, i.e. the first order moment of the Doppler power spectrum, from a measurement in a standardized microsphere colloidal suspension under Brownian motion. The calibration perfusion value depends on several parameters of the suspension that are difficult to keep constant with adequate accuracy, such as the concentration, temperature and the microsphere size distribution. The calibration procedure itself may therefore introduce significant errors in the measured values. An altered calibration procedure, where the zero order moment is used is described and demonstrated in this paper. Since the above mentioned parameters only affect the frequency content of the Doppler power spectrum and not the total power, the zero order moment will be independent of those parameters. It is shown that the variation in the calibration value, as given by measurements on different scattering liquids with a wide range of scattering properties and temperatures, is only a few percent using the proposed method. For the conventional calibration procedure, this variation corresponds to an error introduced by merely a 1°C variation in the reference liquid temperature. The proposed calibration method also enables absolute level comparisons between measured and simulated Doppler power spectra.
© (2011) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Ingemar Fredriksson, Marcus Larsson, Fredrik Salomonsson, and Tomas Strömberg "Improved calibration procedure for laser Doppler perfusion monitors", Proc. SPIE 7906, Optical Diagnostics and Sensing XI: Toward Point-of-Care Diagnostics; and Design and Performance Validation of Phantoms Used in Conjunction with Optical Measurement of Tissue III, 790602 (8 February 2011); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.871938
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Cited by 10 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Doppler effect

Calibration

Scattering

Liquids

Temperature metrology

Particles

Light scattering

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