Author:
Mukherjee Pradipta,Fukuda Shinichi,Lukmanto Donny,Tran Thi Hang,Okada Kosuke,Makita Shuichi,El-Sadek Ibrahim Abd,Lim Yiheng,Yasuno Yoshiaki
Abstract
AbstractRenal tubule has distinct metabolic features and functional activity that may be altered during kidney disease. In this paper, we present label-free functional activity imaging of renal tubule in normal and obstructed mouse kidney models using three-dimensional (3D) dynamic optical coherence tomography (OCT) ex vivo. To create an obstructed kidney model, we ligated the ureter of the left kidney for either 7 or 14 days. Two different dynamic OCT (DOCT) methods were implemented to access the slow and fast activity of the renal tubules: a logarithmic intensity variance (LIV) method and a complex-correlation-based method. Three-dimensional DOCT data were acquired with a 1.3 $$\upmu$$
μ
m swept-source OCT system and repeating raster scan protocols. In the normal kidney, the renal tubule appeared as a convoluted pipe-like structure in the DOCT projection image. Such pipe-like structures were not observed in the kidneys subjected to obstruction of the ureter for several days. Instead of any anatomical structures, a superficial high dynamics appearance was observed in the perirenal cortex region of the obstructed kidneys. These findings suggest that volumetric LIV can be used as a tool to investigate kidney function during kidney diseases.
Funder
Core Research for Evolutional Science and Technology
Japan Science and Technology Agency
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC