• DocumentCode
    748187
  • Title

    A new multimodality system for quantitative in vivo studies in small animals: combination of nuclear magnetic resonance and the radiosensitive β-MicroProbe

  • Author

    Desbrée, A. ; Pain, F. ; Gurden, H. ; Pinot, L. ; Grenier, D. ; Zimmer, L. ; Mastrippolito, R. ; Lanièce, P.

  • Author_Institution
    Inst. de Phys. Nucl., Univ. Paris, Orsay, France
  • Volume
    52
  • Issue
    5
  • fYear
    2005
  • Firstpage
    1281
  • Lastpage
    1287
  • Abstract
    Elucidating complex physiological mechanisms in small animal in vivo requires the development of new investigatory techniques including imaging with multiple modalities. Combining exploratory techniques has the tremendous advantage to record simultaneously complementary parameters on the same animal. In this field, an exciting challenge remains in the combination of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and positron emission tomography (PET) since small animals studies are limited by strict technical constraints in vivo. Coupling NMR with a radiosensitive β-MicroProbe offers therefore an interesting technical alternative. To assess the feasibility of this new dual-modality system, we designed theoretical and experimental approaches to test the ability of the β-Microprobe to quantify radioactivity concentration in an intense magnetic field. In an initial step, simulations were carried out using Geant4. First, we evaluated the influence of a magnetic field on the probe detection volume. Then, the detection sensitivity and energy response of the probe were quantified. In a second step, experiments were run within a 7-T magnet to confirm our simulations results. We showed that using the probe in magnetic fields leads to a slight attenuation in sensitivity and an increase of the scintillation light yield. These data demonstrate the feasibility of combining NMR to the β-MicroProbe.
  • Keywords
    beta-ray detection; biomedical NMR; positron emission tomography; radiation monitoring; radioactivity measurement; 7 T; Geant4; PET; complex physiological mechanisms; detection sensitivity; dual-modality system; energy response; intense magnetic field; nuclear magnetic resonance; positron emission tomography; radioactivity concentration; radiosensitive beta-microprobe; scintillation light yield; small animal in vivo; Animals; In vivo; Magnetic fields; Magnetic resonance imaging; Nuclear magnetic resonance; Optical attenuators; Positron emission tomography; Probes; Solid scintillation detectors; System testing; Beta-microprobe; Geant4; dual modality; in vivo small animal imaging; nuclear magnetic resonance; positron emission tomography;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9499
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TNS.2005.858216
  • Filename
    1546407