| Literature DB >> 31576504 |
Miitu K M Honkanen1,2, Annina E A Saukko3,4, Mikael J Turunen3,5, Wujun Xu3, Goran Lovric6,7, Juuso T J Honkanen8, Mark W Grinstaff9, Vesa-Pekka Lehto3, Juha Töyräs3,10,11.
Abstract
Early degenerative changes of articular cartilage are detected using contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT) with a cationic contrast agent (CA). However, cationic CA diffusion into degenerated cartilage decreases with proteoglycan depletion and increases with elevated water content, thus hampering tissue evaluation at early diffusion time points. Furthermore, the contrast at synovial fluid-cartilage interface diminishes as a function of diffusion time hindering accurate cartilage segmentation. For the first time, we employ quantitative dual-energy CT (QDECT) imaging utilizing a mixture of three CAs (cationic CA4+ and non-ionic gadoteridol which are sensitive to proteoglycan and water contents, respectively, and bismuth nanoparticles which highlight the cartilage surface) to simultaneously segment the articulating surfaces and determine of the cartilage condition. Intact healthy, proteoglycan-depleted, and mechanically injured bovine cartilage samples (n = 27) were halved and imaged with synchrotron microCT 2-h post immersion in triple CA or in dual CA (CA4+ and gadoteridol). CA4+ and gadoteridol partitions were determined using QDECT, and pairwise evaluation of these partitions was conducted for samples immersed in dual and triple CAs. In conclusion, the triple CA method is sensitive to proteoglycan depletion while maintaining sufficient contrast at the articular surface to enable detection of cartilage lesions caused by mechanical impact.Entities:
Keywords: Computed tomography; Contrast-enhanced computed tomography; Dual contrast agent; Post-traumatic osteoarthritis; Synchrotron microCT; Triple contrast agent
Year: 2019 PMID: 31576504 PMCID: PMC6949199 DOI: 10.1007/s10439-019-02362-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Biomed Eng ISSN: 0090-6964 Impact factor: 3.934
Figure 1The uptake of cationic contrast agent (CA4+) is proportional to the fixed charge density conferred by proteoglycans (PGs). Healthy cartilage has a high PG content, and thus the uptake of cationic contrast agent (CA4+) is also high. In degenerated cartilage the uptake of cationic contrast agent into cartilage matrix is limited due to decreased PG content. On the other hand, as the tissue degenerates, the tissue water content increases and steric hindrance decreases allowing more contrast agent molecules (both CA4+ and gadoteridol) to penetrate the tissue. Bismuth nanoparticles (average diameter of 194 nm) are too large to be able to diffuse into either healthy or degenerated cartilage, thus maintaining the contrast at the articulating surface at all diffusion time points.
Figure 2Workflow of the sample preparation and processing protocol. The samples were thawed for previous experiments described in Saukko et al.45 Bovine osteochondral samples were immersed in dual (mixture of CA4+ and gadoteridol) or in triple (mixture of CA4+, gadoteridol and bismuth nanoparticles) contrast agents for 2 h before the synchrotron microCT (µCT) measurements.
Figure 3The stability of the bismuth nanoparticles was determined by measuring the particle diameter after the CA4+ and gadoteridol were added to the triple contrast agent mixture. The particle diameter change was not significant within 24 h according to the statistical analysis with the One-way ANOVA model (p > 0.05), as compared with the original particle diameter.
Figure 4The synchrotron microCT measured CA4+ (×) and gadoteridol (+) concentrations with dual energy technique, and the real concentrations (solid line) within mixture phantoms. The relative mean error in measured concentrations were 1.5 and 2.6% for CA4+ and gadoteridol, respectively.
Figure 5Safranin-O stained histological sections and synchrotron microCT (32 keV) images (average of five consecutive 6.5 µm thick slices) of the intact reference, PG-depleted, and mechanically injured samples imaged with dual and triple contrast agents 2 h after the contrast agent immersion. Articulating surface and cracks are better visualized with the triple contrast agent owing to better contrast induced by bismuth nanoparticles (BiNPs) that, due to their size, are too large to diffuse into cartilage. The enhancement caused by the BiNPs was similar for 34 keV synchrotron microCT images (not shown). CT images were selected to closely match the locations of the histological sections.
Full thickness contrast agent partitions, standard deviations and optical density (OD) for intact reference, PG-depleted and mechanically injured samples.
Statistically (p < 0.05) significant differences between the contrast agent partitions for dual and triple contrast agents are marked with square brackets]
Figure 6Mean (n = 9 for each sample group) depth-wise partitions of CA4+, normalized CA4+, and gadoteridol in cartilage 2 h after the immersion in dual or triple contrast agent. |——| represents the statistically significant (p < 0.05) difference between the contrast agent partition in the intact reference and proteoglycan (PG)-depleted (turquoise) or mechanically injured (red) sample and statistically significant (p < 0.05) correlation with PG distribution (dark green) within the superficial, middle, and deep zones. Partition is defined as contrast agent concentration in the cartilage divided by the concentration of the immersion bath. 0 denotes the articulating surface and 1 the cartilage-bone interface.