Technical features of a CCD video camera system to record cardiac fluorescence data

被引:0
|
作者
William T. Baxter
Jorge M. Davidenko
Leslie M. Loew
Joseph P. Wuskell
José Jalife
机构
[1] SUNY Health Science Center,Department of Pharmacology
[2] the University of Connecticut Health Center,Department of Physiology
来源
关键词
Optical mapping; Voltage-sensitive dyes; Electro-physiology; Conduction velocity; Action potential duration;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
A charge-coupled device (CCD) camera was used to acquie movies of transmembrane activity from thin slices of sheep ventricular epicardial muscle stained with a voltage-sensitive dye. Compared with photodiodes, CCDs have high spatial resolution, but low temporal resolution. Spatial resolution in our system ranged from 0.04 to 0.14 mm/pixel; the acquisition rate was 60, 120, or 240 frames/sec. Propagating waves were readily visualized after subtraction of a background image. The optical signal had an amplitude of 1 to 6 gray levels, with signal-to-noise ratios between 1.5 and 4.4. Because CCD cameras in-tegrate light over the frame interval, moving objects, including propagating waves, are blurred in the resulting movies. A computer model of such an integrating imaging system was developed to study the effects of blur, noise, filtering, and quantization on the ability to measure conduction velocity and action potential duration (APD). The model indicated that blurring, filtering, and quantization do not affect the ability to localize wave fronts in the optical data (i.e., no systematic error in determining spatial position), but noise does increase the uncertainty of the measurements. The model also showed that the low frame rates of the CCD camera introduced a systematic error in the calculation of APD: for cutoff levels >50%, the APD was erroneusly long. Both noise and quantization increased the uncertainty in the APD measurements. The optical measures of conduction velocity were not significantly different from those measured simultaneously with microelectrodes. Optical APDs, however, were longer than the electrically recorded APDs. This APD error could be reduced by using the 50% cutoff level and the fastest frame rate possible.
引用
收藏
页码:713 / 725
页数:12
相关论文
共 34 条
  • [31] Time-resolved confocal fluorescence microscopy:: novel technical features and applications for FLIM, FRET and FCS using a sophisticated data acquisition concept in TCSPC
    Koberling, Felix
    Kraemer, Benedikt
    Kapusta, Peter
    Patting, Matthias
    Wahl, Michael
    Erdmann, Rainer
    PHOTON COUNTING APPLICATIONS, QUANTUM OPTICS, AND QUANTUM CRYPTOGRAPHY, 2007, 6583
  • [32] Novel Method to Detect Cardiac Device Infections by Integrating Electronic Medical Record Text with Structured Data in the Veterans Affairs Health System
    Mull, Hillary
    Stolzmann, Kelly
    Shin, Marlena
    Kalver, Emily
    Schweizer, Marin
    Branch-Elliman, Westyn
    INFECTION CONTROL AND HOSPITAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2020, 41 : S332 - S332
  • [33] A MONTE-CARLO STUDY OF SCATTER IN SIMULTANEOUS TRANSMISSION-EMISSION DATA-ACQUISITION USING A TRIPLE-CAMERA SYSTEM FOR CARDIAC SPECT
    LI, J
    TSUI, BMW
    WELCH, A
    GULLBERG, GT
    JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE, 1994, 35 (05) : P81 - P81
  • [34] Data quality of an electronic health record tool to support VA cardiac catheterization laboratory quality improvement: The VA Clinical Assessment, Reporting, and Tracking System for Cath Labs (CART) program
    Byrd, James Brian
    Vigen, Rebecca
    Plomondon, Mary E.
    Rumsfeld, John S.
    Box, Tamara L.
    Fihn, Stephan D.
    Maddox, Thomas M.
    AMERICAN HEART JOURNAL, 2013, 165 (03) : 434 - 440