| Literature DB >> 23691165 |
Magdalena K Chmarra1, Rune Hansen, Ronald Mårvik, Thomas Langø.
Abstract
Medical imaging plays an important role in patients' care and is continuously being used in managing health and disease. To obtain the maximum benefit from this rapidly developing technology, further research is needed. Ideally, this research should be done in a patient-safe and environment-friendly manner; for example, on phantoms. The goal of this work was to develop a protocol and manufacture a multimodal liver phantom that is suitable for ultrasound, computed tomography, and magnetic resonance imaging modalities. The proposed phantom consists of three types of mimicked soft tissues: liver parenchyma, tumors, and portal veins, that are made of six ingredients: candle gel, sephadex®, agarose, glycerol, distilled water, and silicone string. The entire procedure is advantageous, since preparation of the phantom is simple, rather cost-effective, and reasonably quick - it takes around 2 days. Besides, most of the phantom's parts can be reused to manufacture a new phantom. Comparison of ultrasound images of real patient's liver and the developed phantom shows that the phantom's liver tissue and its structures are well simulated.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23691165 PMCID: PMC3653953 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0064180
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Silicone molds for manufacturing tumors.
Figure 2Silicone phantom container with carpet.
Left: open container; Right: closed container.
Figure 3Silicone string for mimicking portal veins.
Troubleshooting.
| Step | Problem | Possible reason | Solution |
| 11 | The shape of tumor does not resemble mold's cavity | Too thick agarose-based mixture | Repeat the preparation of the tumor tissue. In step 8, pour the mixture into the molds when it has a higher temperature than 40°C |
| 20 | Big air bubbles | Air bubbles left in the carpet | Use spatula to gently move the air bubbles towards phantom container's walls |
| Air bubbles introduced during preparing candle gel mixture | Use spatula to gently move the air bubbles towards phantom container's walls. Place remaining candle gel mix in the vacuum drying oven for 0,5 h | ||
| Air bubbles introduced during pouring candle gel mixture | Use spatula to gently move the air bubbles towards phantom container's walls. Reduce the speed of pouring the gel in the phantom container | ||
| 24 | Big air bubbles | Air bubbles introduced during preparing candle gel mixture | Use spatula to gently move the air bubbles towards phantom container's walls. Place remaining candle gel mix in the vacuum drying oven for 0,5 h |
| Air bubbles introduced during pouring candle gel mixture | Use spatula to gently move the air bubbles towards phantom container's walls. Pour successive candle gel layers via the surface of the phantom container's wall. Reduce the speed of pouring the gel in the phantom container | ||
| Air bubbles from the surface of the tumors | Use spatula to gently move the air bubbles towards phantom container's walls. Consider making new tumors | ||
| Small air bubbles | Air bubbles introduced during pouring candle gel mixture | Use spatula to gently move the air bubbles towards phantom container's walls. Pour successive candle gel layers via the surface of the phantom container's wall | |
| Air bubbles from the surface of the tumors | Use spatula to gently move the air bubbles towards phantom container's walls. Consider making new tumors |
Figure 4Manufacturing multimodal phantom.
Left: step 19 of the protocol; Middle: step 22 of the protocol; Right: the end result of the protocol – multimodal phantom mimicking liver tissue.
Figure 5Visualization of CT and MR images of the phantom.
Left: 3D volume rendering of the CT data with low-level threshold to remove the “parenchyma” (candle gel component). Middle column: Orthogonal slices through the CT volume at the position indicated by the yellow cross in the 3D rendering, axial, coronal and sagittal slices (top to bottom). Right column: Corresponding MR slices from the MR volume data at the same position in the phantom. No thresholding has been applied to the MR data.
Figure 6Orthogonal slicing through a 3D ultrasound volume and the MR volume data.
From top to bottom: axial, coronal and sagittal slices. The tumor model has a silicone string going into it, representing a portal vein, as can be seen in the coronal slice in both ultrasound and MR.
Figure 7The original MR, CT, and US images from the phantom and patients along with the cropped regions.