• Title/Summary/Keyword: in vivo imaging

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In Vivo Reporter Gene Imaging: Recent Progress of PET and Optical Imaging Approaches

  • Min, Jung-Joon
    • Bioinformatics and Biosystems
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    • v.1 no.1
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    • pp.17-27
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    • 2006
  • Recent progress in the development of non-invasive imaging technologies continues to strengthen the role of molecular imaging biological research. These tools have been validated recently in variety of research models, and have been shown to provide continuous quantitative monitoring of the location(s), magnitude, and time-variation of gene delivery and/or expression. This article reviews the use of radionuclide, magnetic resonance, and optical imaging technologies as they have been used in imaging gene delivery and gene expression for molecular imaging applications. The studies published to date demonstrate that noninvasive imaging tools will help to accelerate pre-clinical model validation as well as allow for clinical monitoring of human diseases.

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Molecular imaging of atherosclerosis using reporter gene system

  • Yoo, Ran Ji;Lee, Kyochul;Kang, Joo Hyun;Lee, Yong Jin
    • Journal of Radiopharmaceuticals and Molecular Probes
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    • v.4 no.1
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    • pp.26-31
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    • 2018
  • Macrophages play a key role in atherosclerotic plaque formation, but their participation has been discerned largely via ex vivo analyses of atherosclerotic lesions. Therefore, we aimed to identify atherosclerosis on noninvasive in vivo imaging using reporter gene system. This study demonstrated that recruitment of macrophages could be detected in atherosclerotic plaques of Apolipoprotein E knockout (ApoE-/-) mice with a sodium iodide symporter (NIS) gene imaging system using $^{99m}Tc-SPECT$. This novel approach to tracking macrophages to atherosclerotic plaques in vivo could have applications in studies of arteriosclerotic vascular disease.

In Vivo High Resolution NMR Imaging by Using Surface Gradient Coil (평면 경사자계 코일을 사용한 고분해능 NMR 생체 영상법에 관한 연구)

  • Yi, Jeong-Han;Oh, Woo-Jin;Cho, Zang-Hee
    • Proceedings of the KOSOMBE Conference
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    • v.1990 no.11
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    • pp.48-51
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    • 1990
  • A new in vivo high resolution imaging method which is performed with a newly developed three channel surface gradient coil (SGC) is described. The surface gradient coil can produce more than an order of magnitude stronger gradient fields with good linearity within a limited imaging region. To increase the signal to noise ratio (SNR), we have developed an RF coil integrated surface gradient coil set. In this paper, the geometrical structures and characteristics of the proposed surface gradient coil are discussed and experimentally obtained high resolution images ($50\;{\mu}m$ to $100\;{\mu}m$) of a water filled phantom and a human volunteer's knee using the new surface RF coil integrated SGC set are presented for the demonstration of the in vivo high resolution imaging capability of the new imaging method.

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Nuclear Medicine Imaging Instrumentations for Molecular Imaging (분자영상 획득을 위한 핵의학 영상기기)

  • Chung, Yong-Hyun;Song, Tae-Yong;Choi, Yong
    • The Korean Journal of Nuclear Medicine
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    • v.38 no.2
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    • pp.131-139
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    • 2004
  • Small animal models are extensively utilized in the study of biomedical sciences. Current animal experiments and analysis are largely restricted to in vitro measurements and need to sacrifice animals to perform tissue or molecular analysis. This prevents researchers from observing in vivo the natural evolution of the process under study. Imaging techniques can provide repeatedly in vivo anatomic and molecular information noninvasively. Small animal imaging systems have been developed to assess biological process in experimental animals and increasingly employed in the field of molecular imaging studies. This review outlines the current developments in nuclear medicine imaging instrumentations including fused multi-modality imaging systems for small animal imaging.

Quantitation of In-Vivo Physiological Function using Nuclear Medicine Imaging and Tracer Kinetic Analysis Methods (핵의학 영상과 추적자 동력학 분석법을 이용한 생체기능 정량화)

  • Kim, Su-Jin;Kim, Kyeong-Min;Lee, Jae-Sung
    • Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging
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    • v.42 no.2
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    • pp.145-152
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    • 2008
  • Nuclear medicine imaging has an unique advantage of absolute quantitation of radioactivity concentration in body. Tracer kinetic analysis has been known as an useful investigation methods in quantitative study of in-vivo physiological function. The use of nuclear medicine imaging and kinetic analysis together can provide more useful and powerful intuition in understanding biochemical and molecular phenomena in body. There have been many development and improvement in kinetic analysis methodologies, but the conventional basic concept of kinetic analysis is still essential and required for further advanced study using new radiopharmaceuticals and hybrid molecular imaging techniques. In this paper, the basic theory of kinetic analysis and imaging techniques for suppressing noise were summarized.

The targeting peptides for tumor receptor imaging

  • Yim, Min Su;Ryu, Eun Kyoung
    • Journal of Radiopharmaceuticals and Molecular Probes
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    • v.2 no.2
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    • pp.63-68
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    • 2016
  • Peptides have been developed for in vivo imaging probes against to the specific biomarker in the biological process of living systems. Peptide based imaging probes have been applied to identify and detect their active sites using imaging modalities, such as PET, SPECT and MRI. Especially, tumor receptor imaging with the peptides has been widely used to specific tumor detection. This review discusses the targeting peptides that have been successfully characterized for tumor diagnosis by receptor imaging.

Construction of In Vivo Fluorescent Imaging of Echinococcus granulosus in a Mouse Model

  • Wang, Sibo;Yang, Tao;Zhang, Xuyong;Xia, Jie;Guo, Jun;Wang, Xiaoyi;Hou, Jixue;Zhang, Hongwei;Chen, Xueling;Wu, Xiangwei
    • Parasites, Hosts and Diseases
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    • v.54 no.3
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    • pp.291-299
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    • 2016
  • Human hydatid disease (cystic echinococcosis, CE) is a chronic parasitic infection caused by the larval stage of the cestode Echinococcus granulosus. As the disease mainly affects the liver, approximately 70% of all identified CE cases are detected in this organ. Optical molecular imaging (OMI), a noninvasive imaging technique, has never been used in vivo with the specific molecular markers of CE. Thus, we aimed to construct an in vivo fluorescent imaging mouse model of CE to locate and quantify the presence of the parasites within the liver noninvasively. Drug-treated protoscolices were monitored after marking by JC-1 dye in in vitro and in vivo studies. This work describes for the first time the successful construction of an in vivo model of E. granulosus in a small living experimental animal to achieve dynamic monitoring and observation of multiple time points of the infection course. Using this model, we quantified and analyzed labeled protoscolices based on the intensities of their red and green fluorescence. Interestingly, the ratio of red to green fluorescence intensity not only revealed the location of protoscolices but also determined the viability of the parasites in vivo and in vivo tests. The noninvasive imaging model proposed in this work will be further studied for long-term detection and observation and may potentially be widely utilized in susceptibility testing and therapeutic effect evaluation.

Enhancement of Speckle Contrast in vivo by Combining Linearly Polarized Laser Light and an Analyzer

  • Qureshi, Muhammad Mohsin;Mac, Khuong Duy;Kim, Andrew Hyunjin;Kim, Young Ro;Chung, Euiheon
    • Current Optics and Photonics
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    • v.5 no.4
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    • pp.351-361
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    • 2021
  • Speckle imaging is capable of dynamic data acquisition at high spatiotemporal resolution, and has played a vital role in the functional study of biological specimens. The presence of various optical scatterers within the tissue causes alteration of speckle contrast. Thus structures like blood vessels can be delineated and quantified. Although laser speckle imaging is frequently used, an optimization process to ensure the maximum speckle contrast has not been available. In this respect, we here report an experimental procedure to optimize speckle contrast via applying different combinations of varying polarization of the illuminating laser light and multiple analyzer angles. Specifically, samples were illuminated by the p-polarization, 45°-polarization, and s-polarization of the incident laser, and speckle images were recorded without and with the analyzer rotated from 0° to 180° (Δ = 30°). Following the baseline imaging of a solid diffuser and a fixed brain sample, laser speckle contrast imaging (LSCI) was successfully performed to visualize in vivo mouse-brain blood flow. For oblique laser illumination, the maximum contrast achieved with p-polarized and s-polarized light was perpendicular to the analyzer's axis. This study demonstrates the optimization process for maximizing the speckle contrast, which can improve blood-flow estimation in vivo.

Intravital Laser-scanning Two-photon and Confocal Microscopy for Biomedical Research

  • Moon, Jieun;Kim, Pilhan
    • Medical Lasers
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    • v.10 no.1
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    • pp.1-6
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    • 2021
  • Intravital microscopy is a high-resolution imaging technique based on laser-scanning two-photon and confocal microscopy, which allows dynamic 3D cellular-level imaging of various biological processes in a living animal in vivo. This unique capability allows biomedical researchers to directly verify a hypothesis in a natural in vivo microenvironment at the cellular level in a physiological setting. During the last decade, intravital microscopy has become an indispensable technique in several fields of biomedical sciences such as molecular and cell biology, immunology, neuroscience, developmental, and tumor biology. The most distinct advantage of intravital microscopy is its capability to provide a longitudinal view of disease progression at the cellular-level with repeated intravital imaging of a single animal over time by saving the images after each session.