Title :
Cerebral perfusion imaging of live mice by fluorescent X-ray CT
Author :
Takeda, Tohoru ; Wu, Jin ; Thet-Thet-Lwin ; Sunaguchi, Naoki ; Yuasa, Tetsuya ; Hyodo, Kazuyuki ; Dilmanian, F. Avraham ; Minami, Manabu ; Akatsuka, Takao
Author_Institution :
Graduate Sch. of Comprehensive Huamn Sci., Tsukuba Univ., Ibaraki, Japan
Abstract :
Fluorescent X-ray CT (FXCT), which has high-contrast and high-spatial resolution, is being developed for in-vivo biomedical research. Since FXCT could depict the specific heavy atomic number elements in the order of picogram, the functional imaging resembling to single photon emission CT can be obtained. We have applied this technique for in-vivo and ex-vivo biomedical imaging. FXCT system consists of a silicon (111) double crystal monochromator, an x-ray slit system, a scanning table for object positioning, fluorescent x-ray detectors, and pin-diode detectors. Using non-radioactive iodine labeled IMP, cerebral perfusion of a live mouse was clearly demonstrated at a 1 mm spatial resolution and a 0.1 mm slice thickness. In addition, the structure of extracted mouse brain fixed by formalin was depicted much clearly at 0.5 mm spatial resolution due to the availability of long data acquisition time. Thus, the success of in-vivo FXCT imaging with high resolution allows starting to new approach of bio-imaging research.
Keywords :
brain; computerised tomography; diagnostic radiography; fluorescence; image resolution; medical image processing; biomedical imaging; cerebral perfusion imaging; fluorescent X-ray CT; fluorescent x-ray detectors; high-contrast; high-spatial resolution; in-vivo biomedical research; live mice; nonradioactive iodine labeled IMP; object positioning; pin-diode detectors; scanning table; silicon double crystal monochromator; single photon emission; x-ray slit system; Biomedical imaging; Computed tomography; Fluorescence; High-resolution imaging; Image resolution; Mice; Optical imaging; Spatial resolution; X-ray detectors; X-ray imaging; Cerebral perfusion; Fluorescent X-ray CT; In-vivo imaging; Mouse; Synchrotron Radiation; cerebral blood flow;
Conference_Titel :
Image Processing, 2005. ICIP 2005. IEEE International Conference on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-9134-9
DOI :
10.1109/ICIP.2005.1530461