Noninvasive photobiomodulation therapy (PBMT) of spinal cord disease remains speculative due to the lack of evidence for whether photobiomodulatory irradiances can be transcutaneously delivered to the spinal cord under a clinically acceptable PBMT surface irradiation protocol. We developed a flexible nine-channel photodetection probe for deployment within the spinal canal of a cadaver dog after hemilaminectomy to measure transcutaneously transmitted PBMT irradiance at nine sites over an eight-cm spinal canal length. The probe was built upon a 6.325-mm tubular stem, to the surface of which nine photodiodes were epoxied at approximately 1 cm apart. The photodiode has a form factor of 4.80  mm×2.10  mm×1.15  mm (length×width×height). Each photodiode was individually calibrated to deliver 1 V per 7.58  μW/cm2 continuous irradiance at 850 nm. The outputs of eight photodiodes were logged concurrently using a data acquisition module interfacing eight channels of differential analog signals, while the output of the ninth photodiode was measured by a precision multimeter. This flexible probe rendered simultaneous intraspinal (nine-site) measurements of transcutaneous PBMT irradiations at 980 nm in a pilot cadaver dog model. At a surface continuous irradiance of 3.14  W/cm2 applied off-contact between L1 and L2, intraspinal irradiances picked up by nine photodiodes had a maximum of 327.48  μW/cm2 without the skin and 5.68  μW/cm2 with the skin.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/1.JBO.23.1.010503DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

flexible nine-channel
8
photobiomodulation therapy
8
spinal cord
8
spinal canal
8
cadaver dog
8
continuous irradiance
8
nine-channel photodetector
4
probe
4
photodetector probe
4
probe facilitated
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!