Publication | Open Access
Characterization and treatment monitoring of inflammatory arthritis by photoacoustic imaging: a study on adjuvant-induced arthritis rat model
47
Citations
8
References
2013
Year
EngineeringInflammatory ArthritisInflammationPositron Emission TomographyRheumatoid DisorderTissue ImagingBiomedical OpticOsteoarthritisTreatment MonitoringPhotoacoustic ImagingInflammatory Rheumatic DiseaseRheumatoid ArthritisNovel Imaging MethodRadiologyRheumatologyVascular ImageAllergyMedical ImagingOphthalmologyBiophotonicsPharmacologyImaging ResultsAnti-inflammatoryLaser-based Photoacoustic ImagingBiomedical ImagingOptical Coherence TomographyMedicine
Neovascularity also known as angiogenesis is an early feature of inflammatory arthritis disease. Therefore, identifying the development of neovascularity is one way to potentially detect and characterize arthritis. Laser-based photoacoustic imaging (PAI) is an emerging biomedical imaging modality which may aid in the detection of both early and continued development of neovascularity. In this work, we investigated the feasibility of PAI to measure angiogenesis, for the purpose of evaluating and monitoring inflammatory arthritis and responses to treatment. The imaging results on an arthritis rat model demonstrate that 1) there is noticeable enhancement in image intensities in the arthritic ankle joints when compared to the normal joints, and 2) there is noticeable decrease in image intensities in the arthritic ankle joints after treatment when compared to the untreated arthritic joints. In order to validate the findings from PAI, we performed positron emission tomography (PET) and histology on the same joints. The diameters of the ankle joints, as a clinical score of the arthritis, were also measured at each time point.
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