| Literature DB >> 33033290 |
Stefan Sawall1,2, Jan Beckendorf3,4, Carlo Amato5,6, Joscha Maier5,7, Johannes Backs3,4, Greetje Vande Velde8, Marc Kachelrieß5,6, Jan Kuntz5,6.
Abstract
Coronary computed tomography angiography is an established technique in clinical practice and a valuable tool in the diagnosis of coronary artery disease in humans. Imaging of coronaries in preclinical research, i.e. in small animals, is very difficult due to the high demands on spatial and temporal resolution. Mice exhibit heart rates of up to 600 beats per minute motivating the need for highest detector framerates while the coronaries show diameters below 100 μm indicating the requirement for highest spatial resolution. We herein use a custom built micro-CT equipped with dedicated reconstruction algorithms to illustrate that coronary imaging in mice is possible. The scanner provides a spatial and temporal resolution sufficient for imaging of smallest, moving anatomical structures and the dedicated reconstruction algorithms reduced radiation dose to less than 1 Gy but do not yet allow for longitudinal studies. Imaging studies were performed in ten mice administered with a blood-pool contrast agent. Results show that the course of the left coronary artery can be visualized in all mice and all major branches can be identified for the first time using micro-CT. This reduces the gap in cardiac imaging between clinical practice and preclinical research.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33033290 PMCID: PMC7546728 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-73735-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Photo of the used prototype micro-CT system. The yellow dashed lines indicate the cone-beam geometry of the system formed by a microfocus X-ray source and a high-speed X-ray detector. Data are transmitted using a rotary joint located in the back of the gantry.
Figure 2Phase-correlated reconstructions of a mouse showing different cardiac motion states (columns). The first row illustrates axial slices, the second row coronal slices and the third row a sliding thin slab-maximum intensity projections (STS-MIP). Gating parameters are chosen as described in the text. The asterisk marks the first bifurcation of the left coronary artery. ().
Figure 3Volume rendering of the left coronary artery (green) and the cardiac anatomy (red) in one of the ten mice. Note that the first bifurcation of the left coronary is covered by the left auricle and cannot be seen in the figure. (Exposure Render 1.1.0[32], https://github.com/ThomasKroes/exposure-render).
Figure 5Coronal STS-MIP of another mouse showing the left coronary artery (yellow arrows) emerging from its ostium at the aorta (A). Unenhanced regions in the left ventricle are papillary muscles (P). A small vessel seems also visible in the vicinity (*) of the right ventricle. ().
Figure 4Dose reduction study with radiation dose levels between and . The top row shows the results obtained using a conventional phase-correlated (PC) reconstruction and the bottom row illustrates results obtained using a motion compensation (MoCo) method. ().