Blood flow dynamics in microvascular networks are intimately related to the health of tissues and organs. While numerous imaging modalities and techniques have been developed to assess blood flow dynamics for various applications, their utilization has been hampered by limited imaging speed and indirect quantification of blood flow dynamics. Here, we demonstrate direct blood cell flow imaging (DBFI) that provides visualization of individual motions of blood cells over a field of 0.71 mm x 1.42 mm with a time resolution of 0.69 ms (1450 frames per second) without using any exogenous agents. DBFI enables precise dynamic analysis of blood cell flow velocities and fluxes in various vessels over a large field, from capillaries to arteries and veins, with unprecedented time resolution. Several exemplary applications of DBFI illustrate the potential of this new imaging technology.
Although the beneficial effects of regular physical exercise on brain aging and neurodegenerative diseases are well recognized, a clear understanding of how exercise leads to such benefits remains elusive. In this work, we investigated the effects of normal aging on cortical microvascular oxygenation, perfusion, and morphology and the impact of four months of voluntary wheel running on cortical microvascular oxygenation in 20 months old mice. We used two-photon microscopy to assess age-related and exercise-induced changes in the distributions of capillary oxygen partial pressure (PO2) and red-blood-cell flux across cortical depth in awake mice. Our finding suggests the mitigating effect of exercise on the progression of age-related changes in capillary oxygenation in deeper cortical layers which may be related to health-enhancing benefits of exercise in elderly individuals.
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