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Computed tomography-guided time-domain diffuse fluorescence tomography in small animals for localization of cancer biomarkers

Authors :
Tichauer, Kenneth M.
Holt, Robert W.
Samkoe, Kimberley S.
El-Ghussein, Fadi
Gunn, Jason R.
Jermyn, Michael
Dehghani, Hamid
Leblond, Frédéric
Pogue, Brian W.
Tichauer, Kenneth M.
Holt, Robert W.
Samkoe, Kimberley S.
El-Ghussein, Fadi
Gunn, Jason R.
Jermyn, Michael
Dehghani, Hamid
Leblond, Frédéric
Pogue, Brian W.
Source :
PolyPublie
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Small animal fluorescence molecular imaging (FMI) can be a powerful tool for preclinical drug discovery and development studies. However, light absorption by tissue chromophores (e.g., hemoglobin, water, lipids, melanin) typically limits optical signal propagation through thicknesses larger than a few millimeters. Compared to other visible wavelengths, tissue absorption for red and near-infrared (near-IR) light absorption dramatically decreases and non-elastic scattering becomes the dominant light-tissue interaction mechanism. The relatively recent development of fluorescent agents that absorb and emit light in the near-IR range (600-1000 nm), has driven the development of imaging systems and light propagation models that can achieve whole body three-dimensional imaging in small animals. Despite great strides in this area, the ill-posed nature of diffuse fluorescence tomography remains a significant problem for the stability, contrast recovery and spatial resolution of image reconstruction techniques and the optimal approach to FMI in small animals has yet to be agreed on. The majority of research groups have invested in charge-coupled device (CCD)-based systems that provide abundant tissue-sampling but suboptimal sensitivity, while our group and a few others have pursued systems based on very high sensitivity detectors, that at this time allow dense tissue sampling to be achieved only at the cost of low imaging throughput. Here we demonstrate the methodology for applying single-photon detection technology in a fluorescence tomography system to localize a cancerous brain lesion in a mouse model. The fluorescence tomography (FT) system employed single photon counting using photomultiplier tubes (PMT) and information-rich time-domain light detection in a non-contact conformation. This provides a simultaneous collection of transmitted excitation and emission light, and includes automatic fluorescence excitation exposure control, laser referencing, and co-regi

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
PolyPublie
Notes :
PolyPublie
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1429911510
Document Type :
Electronic Resource