Publication | Open Access
High-spatial-resolution x-ray fluorescence tomography with spectrally matched nanoparticles
45
Citations
29
References
2018
Year
NanoparticlesEngineeringMicroscopyAdvanced ImagingBiomedical EngineeringX-ray FluorescenceX-ray ImagingNanomedicineTranslational Molecular ImagingMolecular ImagingBiophysicsNovel Imaging MethodRadiologyHealth SciencesHigh SensitivityLaboratory Xrf TomographyFluorescence MicroscopyBiomedical ImagingImaging
Present macroscopic biomedical imaging methods provide either morphology with high spatial resolution (e.g. CT) or functional/molecular information with lower resolution (e.g. PET). X-ray fluorescence (XRF) from targeted nanoparticles allows molecular or functional imaging but sensitivity has so far been insufficient resulting in low spatial resolution, despite long exposure times and high dose. In the present paper, we show that laboratory XRF tomography with metal-core nanoparticles (NPs) provides a path to functional/molecular biomedical imaging with ~100 µm resolution in living rodents. The high sensitivity and resolution rely on the combination of a high-brightness liquid-metal-jet x-ray source, pencil-beam optics, photon-counting energy-dispersive detection, and spectrally matched NPs. The method is demonstrated on mice for 3D tumor imaging via passive targeting of in-house-fabricated molybdenum NPs. Exposure times, nanoparticle dose, and radiation dose agree well with in vivo imaging.
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