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Micro-imaging of Brain Cancer Radiation Therapy Using Phase-contrast Computed Tomography
- Source :
- Int. J. Radiat. Oncol. Biol. Phys. 101, 965-984 (2018)
- Publication Year :
- 2017
-
Abstract
- Purpose Experimental neuroimaging provides a wide range of methods for the visualization of brain anatomic morphology down to subcellular detail. Still, each technique-specific detection mechanism presents compromises among the achievable field-of-view size, spatial resolution, and nervous tissue sensitivity, leading to partial sample coverage, unresolved morphologic structures, or sparse labeling of neuronal populations and often also to obligatory sample dissection or other sample invasive manipulations. X-ray phase-contrast imaging computed tomography (PCI-CT) is an experimental imaging method that simultaneously provides micrometric spatial resolution, high soft-tissue sensitivity, and exvivo full organ rodent brain coverage without any need for sample dissection, staining or labeling, or contrast agent injection. In the present study, we explored the benefits and limitations of PCI-CT use for invitro imaging of normal and cancerous brain neuromorphology after invivo treatment with synchrotron-generated x-ray microbeam radiation therapy (MRT), a spatially fractionated experimental high-dose radiosurgery. The goals were visualization of the MRT effects on nervous tissue and a qualitative comparison of the results to the histologic and high-field magnetic resonance imaging findings. Methods and Materials MRT was administered invivo to the brain of both healthy and cancer-bearing rats. At 45days after treatment, the brain was dissected out and imaged exvivo using propagation-based PCI-CT. Results PCI-CT visualizes the brain anatomy and microvasculature in 3 dimensions and distinguishes cancerous tissue morphology, necrosis, and intratumor accumulation of iron and calcium deposits. Moreover, PCI-CT detects the effects of MRT throughout the treatment target areas (eg, the formation of micrometer-thick radiation-induced tissue ablation). The observed neurostructures were confirmed by histologic and immunohistochemistry examination and related to the micro-magnetic resonance imaging data. Conclusions PCI-CT enabled a unique 3D neuroimaging approach for exvivo studies on small animal models in that it concurrently delivers high-resolution insight of local brain tissue morphology in both normal and cancerous micro-milieu, localizes radiosurgical damage, and highlights the deep microvasculature. This method could assist experimental small animal neurology studies in the postmortem evaluation of neuropathology or treatment effects. &nbsp
- Subjects :
- Male
Cancer Research
Pathology
medicine.medical_specialty
Neurology
medicine.medical_treatment
FIS/07 - FISICA APPLICATA (A BENI CULTURALI, AMBIENTALI, BIOLOGIA E MEDICINA)
Neuropathology
Radiosurgery
030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Neuroimaging
medicine
Animals
Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging
Radiation
medicine.diagnostic_test
business.industry
Brain Neoplasms
Nervous tissue
Brain
Magnetic resonance imaging
computed tomography, microCT, imaging, X-rays
X-Ray Microtomography
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Rats, Inbred F344
Rats
Radiation therapy
medicine.anatomical_structure
Oncology
Neuromorphology
Microvessels
Neuroradiography
business
Glioblastoma
030217 neurology & neurosurgery
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 1879355X
- Volume :
- 101
- Issue :
- 4
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- International journal of radiation oncology, biology, physics
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....d0d2ffa5ae9a2000e07a7d3fc6c1e87e