Brain hemorrhage, specifically intraventricular hemorrhage (IVH), is considered one of the primary and leading causes of cerebral anomalies in neonates. Several imaging modalities including the most popular, cranial ultrasound, are… Click to show full abstract
Brain hemorrhage, specifically intraventricular hemorrhage (IVH), is considered one of the primary and leading causes of cerebral anomalies in neonates. Several imaging modalities including the most popular, cranial ultrasound, are not capable of detecting early-stage IVHs. Photoacoustic imaging (PAI) exhibited great potential for detecting cerebral hemorrhage in studies limited to small animal models, but these models are not comparable to neonatal brain morphology. However, hemorrhage detection in large animal models using PAI is rare due to the complexity and cost of inducing hemorrhage in-vivo. Moreover, in-vitro studies are unable to represent the physiology and environment of the hemorrhagic lesion. Here, we proposed a pseudo hemorrhage implementation method in the sheep brain that allows us to mimic different hemorrhagic lesions ex-vivo without compromising the complexity of cerebral imaging. This approach enables a true evaluation of PAI performance for detecting hemorrhages and can be utilized as a reference to optimize the PAI system for in-vivo imaging. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
               
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