Luminescence thermometry for brain activity monitoring: A perspective
Entity
UAM. Departamento de Física de MaterialesPublisher
Frontiers MediaDate
2022-07-12Citation
10.3389/fchem.2022.941861
Frontiers in Chemistry 10 (2022): 941861
ISSN
2296-2646 (online)DOI
10.3389/fchem.2022.941861Funded by
This work was financed by the Spanish Ministerio de Innovación y Ciencias under project NANONERV PID 2019-106211RB-I00. BD acknowledges support from the Australian Research Council (DE200100985), RMIT University (Vice-Chancellor’s Fellowship Programme) and the Australian Academy of Sciences (JG Russell Award). PR-S is grateful for a Juan de la Cierva—Incorporación scholarship (IJC2019-041915-I). AB acknowledges funding from Comunidad de Madrid through TALENTO grant ref. 2019-T1/IND-14014. EX is grateful for a Juan de la Cierva - Incorporación scholarship (IJC2020-045229-I)Project
Gobierno de España. PID2019-106211RB-I00Editor's Version
https://doi.org/10.3389/fchem.2022.941861Subjects
Brain Activity; Brain Diagnosis; Luminescence Thermometry; Thermal Diagnosis; FísicaRights
© 2022 Rodríguez-Sevilla, Marin, Ximendes, del Rosal, Benayas and JaqueAbstract
Minimally invasive monitoring of brain activity is essential not only to gain understanding on the working principles of the brain, but also for the development of new diagnostic tools. In this perspective we describe how brain thermometry could be an alternative to conventional methods (e.g., magnetic resonance or nuclear medicine) for the acquisition of thermal images of the brain with enough spatial and temperature resolution to track brain activity in minimally perturbed animals. We focus on the latest advances in transcranial luminescence thermometry introducing a critical discussion on its advantages and shortcomings. We also anticipate the main challenges that the application of luminescent nanoparticles for brain thermometry will face in next years. With this work we aim to promote the development of near infrared luminescence for brain activity monitoring, which could also benefit other research areas dealing with the brain and its illnesses
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Google Scholar:Rodríguez Sevilla, Paloma
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Marin, Riccardo
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Ximendes, Erving Clayton
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Rosal Rabes, Blanca del
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Benayas Hernández, Antonio
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Jaque García, Daniel
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