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10 February 2023 Illuminating neurodegeneration: a future perspective on near-infrared spectroscopy in dementia research
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Abstract

Significance

Dementia presents a global healthcare crisis, and neuroimaging is the main method for developing effective diagnoses and treatments. Yet currently, there is a lack of sensitive, portable, and low-cost neuroimaging tools. As dementia is associated with vascular and metabolic dysfunction, near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) has the potential to fill this gap.

Aim

This future perspective aims to briefly review the use of NIRS in dementia to date and identify the challenges involved in realizing the full impact of NIRS for dementia research, including device development, study design, and data analysis approaches.

Approach

We briefly appraised the current literature to assess the challenges, giving a critical analysis of the methods used. To assess the sensitivity of different NIRS device configurations to the brain with atrophy (as is common in most forms of dementia), we performed an optical modeling analysis to compare their cortical sensitivity.

Results

The first NIRS dementia study was published in 1996, and the number of studies has increased over time. In general, these studies identified diminished hemodynamic responses in the frontal lobe and altered functional connectivity in dementia. Our analysis showed that traditional (low-density) NIRS arrays are sensitive to the brain with atrophy (although we see a mean decrease of 22% in the relative brain sensitivity with respect to the healthy brain), but there is a significant improvement (a factor of 50 sensitivity increase) with high-density arrays.

Conclusions

NIRS has a bright future in dementia research. Advances in technology – high-density devices and intelligent data analysis—will allow new, naturalistic task designs that may have more clinical relevance and increased reproducibility for longitudinal studies. The portable and low-cost nature of NIRS provides the potential for use in clinical and screening tests.

CC BY: © The Authors. Published by SPIE under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Distribution or reproduction of this work in whole or in part requires full attribution of the original publication, including its DOI.
Sruthi Srinivasan, Emilia Butters, Liam Collins-Jones, Li Su, John O’Brien, and Gemma Bale "Illuminating neurodegeneration: a future perspective on near-infrared spectroscopy in dementia research," Neurophotonics 10(2), 023514 (10 February 2023). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.NPh.10.2.023514
Received: 27 July 2022; Accepted: 13 January 2023; Published: 10 February 2023
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CITATIONS
Cited by 5 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Near infrared spectroscopy

Dementia

Brain

Design and modelling

Data modeling

Neuroimaging

Neurodegeneration

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