71
The History of Bioelectromagnetism
visits to the institute before the fnal decision was made (Grzybowsli and Pietrzak, 2012). Special attention
is paid to that Finsen donated much of his Nobel Prize award to both his institute and the sanatorium for
heart patients. Currently, it should be mentioned that light therapy is treated with much greater caution
because over exposure to UV light can lead to melanoma and other skin cancer.
Next, we introduce another topic. Te infrared region lies between the visible and microwave por
tions of the electromagnetic spectrum. Infrared radiation is invisible to the human eye but it can be
focused, refected, and polarized just like visible light. Te NIR band has a wavelength range from 0.78
to 3 μm. NIRS uses near-infrared radiation. In the 1980s, a single-unit, stand-alone NIRS system was
made available, but the application of NIRS was focused more on chemical analysis. With the introduc
tion of optical-fber in the mid-1980s and with the monochromator-detector developments in the early
1990s, NIRS became a more powerful tool for other than chemical analysis. Te use of NIR for bio
medical measurements dates back to 1977, when Frans Jöbsis (1929–2006), professor at Duke University,
published the non-invasively measurement of the changes of oxygenation of the brain in an intact cat
head (Jöbsis, 1977). In the 1990s, it became clear that NIRS could capture changes in hemoglobin con
centration that were linked to changes in the blood fow in the brain, which was linked to neural activity.
Tis attracted great attention as a new functional imaging method, fNIRS. Te fNIRS is the term used
in contrast to fMRI, which detects changes in the magnetic susceptibility of hemoglobin and images
it to obtain BOLD information. On the other hand, fNIRS captures changes in the absorption of light
as changes in the concentration of hemoglobin. Te diference is that fNIRS can measure the cerebral
cortex with surface optical sensors and fMRI is used to visualize deeper brain activity.
Under the suggestion of Jöbsis, Mamoru Tamura (1943–2009), professor at the Research Institute
for Electronic Science, Hokkaido University, and David Tomas Delpy, professor at University College
London, produced great advances in fNIRS (Delpy et al., 1987; Cope and Delpy, 1988). Tamura published
with instrumental support from Hamamatsu Photonics, K.K., and Shimazu Corporation the frst fNIRS
human studies (Hoshi and Tamura, 1993a, b). Tey observed bilateral prefrontal cortex oxygenation
changes in 14 volunteers during a mental task using CW instruments, each equipped with a single chan
nel. Jöbsis is the founder of NIRS. Tamura was known as one of the great pioneers in biomedical optics
and fNIRS. Japanese organizations such as Hamamatsu Photonics, K.K, and Shimazu Corporation sup
port greatly to the development and the use of optical radiation in biology, chemistry, and medicine.
In 2008, Delpy received the Rosalind Franklin Medal and Prize for his pioneering development of a
range of novel techniques and instruments to monitor the health of patients in intensive care units
and to image tissue physiology and metabolism. Te Rosalind Franklin Medal and Prize is given for
distinguished contributions to physics applied to life science including biological physics. Tis Medal
and Prize was named afer Rosalind Elsie Franklin (1920–1958), a British chemist and X-ray crystal
lographer. She performed X-ray analysis of DNA and helped the creation of the Watson-Crick Model.
In 1935, Karl Matthes (1905–1962), a German physician, made a device which measured continuously
the oxyhemoglobin saturation of human blood, the in vivo transillumination of the ear (Severinghaus,
1986). In 1939, using two diferent wave lengths of light (red and infrared) he developed the frst red and
infrared ear oxygen saturation meter. Infrared wavelength is absorbed more by oxygenated hemoglobin
and red wavelength is absorbed more by deoxygenated hemoglobin. Glenn Allan Millikan (1906–1947),
an American physiologist, inventor, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, was the son of Robert
Andrews Millikan (1868–1953), an American experimental physicist. Father Millikan won the Nobel
Prize in Physics in 1923 for the measurement of the elementary electric charge and for his work on the
photoelectric efect. Glenn Millikan made an ear oximeter (Millikan and Taylor, 1942). Although the
ear oximeter performed very poorly due to the fact that light absorption of ear is afected very little by
arterial blood, he coined term oximeter. Te pulse-oximeter would consist of a probe attached to the
patient’s ear lobe or fnger and a display unit. Using NIR in the range of 0.6–1 μm, the pulse-oximeter
was used as a non-invasive method for monitoring a person’s oxygenation of the blood. Te oxygenation
of the blood was measured as a function of time by determining the absorption at two diferent wave
lengths. In 1947, Glenn Millikan was killed by a falling rock during mountain climbing.