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EN
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) affects the morphological structure and causes significant degradation in kidney function, leading to renal replacement treatment in affected individuals. Vascular rarefaction is thought to be an important factor in accelerating kidney damage in CKD patients, therefore, the assessment of renal morphology and vasculature is crucial in nephrology. The objective of this study was to evaluate the morphological and vascular changes caused by CKD in mice kidneys. In this study, dual photoacoustic microscopy (PAM) and optical coherence microscopy (OCM) oriented wide-field high-resolution imaging modalities were employed for diseased renal imaging. The unilateral ureteral obstruction (UUO) model was used to prepare renal samples with CKD, and the developed wide-field dual imaging system was used to image both control and CKD-affected kidneys for assessing vascular and morphological changes during CKD progression. The obtained results reveal a gradual alteration in vascular intensity and pelvis space with the progress of UUO disease. Furthermore, a quantitative micro-vessel analysis was performed based on the node, junction, and mesh of the vessel, which provides details on the increasing microvascular-related characteristics in the peripheral area as the disease progresses. Thus, by concurrently employing the advantages of each optical imaging technique, the proposed method of assessing the OCM-based morphological and PAM-based vascular properties of the renal sample using a wide-field multimodal imaging system can be an efficient technique for whole volume analysis without any exogenous contrast agents in kidney histopathology.
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