DocumentCode :
3144058
Title :
Computed tomography imaging of lungs in mouse models of human disease : advancing the computing interfaces with physiology
Author :
Hsu, Lewis L. ; Schimel, Daniel M.
Author_Institution :
Pediatric Hematology, Drexel Univ., Philadelphia, PA, USA
fYear :
2004
fDate :
24-25 June 2004
Firstpage :
385
Lastpage :
390
Abstract :
New research applications for imaging can come from combining advances in anesthetic management and respiratory synchronization with computed tomography (CT) algorithms. CT imaging has the potential to provide lung pathologic details non-invasively, and to facilitate the structural and functional studies in mouse models of human diseases. Examples include atelectasis in lungs of transgenic mice expressing sickle hemoglobin, and bacterial pneumonia. However, human high-resolution CT is typically obtained during a breath-hold, asking the patient to voluntarily hold her breath for several seconds and hold still for a crisp image. Mice cannot cooperate in this manner, so inhalational general anesthesia keeps the animal in position but breathing spontaneously during the 20 to 40 minutes of scans. Mice with pleural effusion and with severe pulmonary fibrosis survived micro CT under anesthesia. Imaging can be gated to obtain one set of images in the expiratory phase of the respiratory cycle, and another in the inspiratory phase. Respiratory gating provides superior image quality, and comparing inspiratory vs. expiratory lung volume provides an estimate of tidal volume. Correlating human conditions with pathophysiology in mouse models will permit more translational research.
Keywords :
biomedical imaging; computerised tomography; diseases; lung; medical image processing; physiology; anesthetic management; atelectasis; bacterial pneumonia; computed tomography imaging; computing interfaces; human disease; lung volume; lungs; mouse models; physiology; respiratory synchronization; sickle hemoglobin; Anesthesia; Anesthetic drugs; Computed tomography; Computer interfaces; Diseases; High-resolution imaging; Humans; Lungs; Mice; Physiology;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Computer-Based Medical Systems, 2004. CBMS 2004. Proceedings. 17th IEEE Symposium on
ISSN :
1063-7125
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-2104-5
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/CBMS.2004.1311744
Filename :
1311744
Link To Document :
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