Title :
Experimental study on in vivo optical and radionuclide imaging in small animals
Author :
Autiero, M. ; Celentano, L. ; Cozzolino, R. ; Laccetti, P. ; Marotta, M. ; Mettivier, G. ; Montesi, M.C. ; Riccio, P. ; Roberti, G. ; Russo, P.
Author_Institution :
Dipt. di Sci. Fisiche, Univ. di Napoli Federico II, Italy
Abstract :
We report on tests of a combined fluorescence and radionuclide planar imaging system for in vivo investigation on small animals. Combined images of anaesthetized mice bearing a surface solid tumor are presented. The fluorescent marker is a hematoporphyrin compound laser-excited with green light and imaged in the red fluorescence emission with a standard monochrome charge coupled device (CCD) camera. The gamma-ray (99mTc) pinhole imaging system uses a semiconductor pixel detector obtained by hybridizing a Silicon (300-μm thick) or a CdTe (1-mm thick) pixel detector to the Medipix2 (55-μm pitch) readout integrated circuit for single photon counting. The acquisition of combined images of the tumor area (fluorescence: animal top view; radionuclide: bottom view) shows that the tumor area can be imaged in a few minutes, with a few millimeter resolution (1-mm pinhole diameter), radioactively (99mTc MIBI, 74 MBq), and with the optical system. Combined imaging revealed also a different uptake of the two types of tumors studied (one grown from anaplastic human thyroid carcinoma-derived cells, the other from human papillary carcinoma-derived cells). Future progress will be toward a more compact optical setup and the use of a thicker CdTe detector.
Keywords :
gamma-ray detection; nuclear electronics; position sensitive particle detectors; radioisotope imaging; semiconductor counters; silicon radiation detectors; tumours; 1 mm; 300 micron; 55 micron; CdTe pixel detector; Medipix readout integrated circuit; anaesthetized mice bearing; anaplastic human thyroid carcinoma-derived cells; combined fluorescence-radionuclide planar imaging system; combined image acquisition; few millimeter resolution; gamma-ray pinhole imaging system; hemato-porphyrin compound laser-excited fluorescent marker; human papillary carcinoma-derived cells; in vivo investigation; monochrome charge coupled device camera; optical system; red fluorescence emission; semiconductor pixel detector; silicon pixel detector; single photon counting; small animals; surface solid tumor; tumor area; Animals; Charge-coupled image sensors; Fluorescence; Gamma ray detection; Gamma ray detectors; In vivo; Neoplasms; Optical imaging; Photonic integrated circuits; Pixel; Fluorescence; nuclear imaging; optical imaging; radiation imaging;
Journal_Title :
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TNS.2004.843095