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Analyzing near-infrared scattering from human skin to monitor changes in hematocrit
2011
Journal of Biomedical Optics
Probing tissue with near-infrared radiation (NIR) simultaneously produces remitted fluorescence and Raman scattering (IE) plus Rayleigh/Mie light scattering (EE) that noninvasively give chemical and physical information about the materials and objects within. We model tissue as a three-phase system: plasma and red blood cell (RBC) phases that are mobile and a static tissue phase. In vivo, any volume of tissue naturally experiences spatial and temporal fluctuations of blood plasma and RBC
doi:10.1117/1.3625283
pmid:21950940
fatcat:hd5f7jt2nrenvpywcna23ofz3u