On 30th Oct Dr Gemma Bale (UCL) shines light on the brain! Come see how she illuminates injury in infants
Weds 30th Oct 18:30 Institute of Physics, N19BU. Tea/coffee from 18:00
Abstract: Near-infrared spectroscopy is a technique to monitor changes in brain activity using infrared light. It is becoming an important tool in neuroscience and neurointensive care as it can monitor the activity and health of the brain
in a safe, non-ionising, way. Infrared light can travel through the skull and into the brain, which means that we can use spectroscopy to identify molecules within the brain non-invasively. Important physiological molecules such as haemoglobin and cytochrome-c-oxidase,
an enzyme within the mitochondria, have oxygenation-dependent spectra so we can monitor changes in blood oxygenation and metabolism using light. This lecture will cover a broad range of topics to reflect the multidisciplinary nature of medical physics. In
particular: the physics of light transport through tissue, the engineering of optical medical devices, the physiology of the brain in health and disease, and how these link together. I will show new developments from my own research, brain injury in new-born
babies, and discuss the future of optics in medicine
Twitter: https://lnkd.in/e8wGNYV
Register here: https://lnkd.in/ek4sfuq
Best wishes
Mark
Dr Mark Telling
Vice President (membership), Institute of Physics