| Literature DB >> 30407195 |
Willi L Wagner1, Felix Wuennemann1, Serena Pacilé2, Jonas Albers3, Fulvia Arfelli4, Diego Dreossi2, Jürgen Biederer1, Philip Konietzke1, Wolfram Stiller1, Mark O Wielpütz1, Agostino Accardo5, Marco Confalonieri6, Maria Cova7, Joachim Lotz3, Frauke Alves3, Hans Ulrich Kauczor1, Giuliana Tromba2, Christian Dullin2.
Abstract
In-line free propagation phase-contrast synchrotron tomography of the lungs has been shown to provide superior image quality compared with attenuation-based computed tomography (CT) in small-animal studies. The present study was performed to prove the applicability on a human-patient scale using a chest phantom with ventilated fresh porcine lungs. Local areas of interest were imaged with a pixel size of 100 µm, yielding a high-resolution depiction of anatomical hallmarks of healthy lungs and artificial lung nodules. Details like fine spiculations into surrounding alveolar spaces were shown on a micrometre scale. Minor differences in artificial lung nodule density were detected by phase retrieval. Since we only applied a fraction of the X-ray dose used for clinical high-resolution CT scans, it is believed that this approach may become applicable to the detailed assessment of focal lung lesions in patients in the future.Entities:
Keywords: high-resolution porcine lung imaging; phase retrieval; preclinical chest phantom; propagation based imaging; synchrotron radiation
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30407195 DOI: 10.1107/S1600577518013401
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Synchrotron Radiat ISSN: 0909-0495 Impact factor: 2.616