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1.
J Synchrotron Radiat ; 2024 Sep 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39007824

ABSTRACT

The Biomedical Imaging and Therapy facility of the Canadian Light Source comprises two beamlines, which together cover a wide X-ray energy range from 13 keV up to 140 keV. The beamlines were designed with a focus on synchrotron applications in preclinical imaging and veterinary science as well as microbeam radiation therapy. While these remain a major part of the activities of both beamlines, a number of recent upgrades have enhanced the versatility and performance of the beamlines, particularly for high-resolution microtomography experiments. As a result, the user community has been quickly expanding to include researchers in advanced materials, batteries, fuel cells, agriculture, and environmental studies. This article summarizes the beam properties, describes the endstations together with the detector pool, and presents several application cases of the various X-ray imaging techniques available to users.

2.
PLoS One ; 18(10): e0291757, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37788257

ABSTRACT

Accurate evaluation of morphological changes in articular cartilage are necessary for early detection of osteoarthritis (OA). 3T magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has highly sensitive contrast resolution and is widely used clinically to detect OA. However, synchrotron radiation phase-contrast imaging computed tomography (SR-PCI) can also provide contrast to tissue interfaces that do not have sufficient absorption differences, with the added benefit of very high spatial resolution. Here, MRI was compared with SR-PCI for quantitative evaluation of human articular cartilage. Medial tibial condyles were harvested from non-OA donors and from OA patients receiving knee replacement surgery. Both imaging methods revealed that average cartilage thickness and cartilage volume were significantly reduced in the OA group, compared to the non-OA group. When comparing modalities, the superior resolution of SR-PCI enabled more precise mapping of the cartilage surface relative to MRI. As a result, MRI showed significantly higher average cartilage thickness and cartilage volume, compared to SR-PCI. These data highlight the potential for high-resolution imaging of articular cartilage using SR-PCI as a solution for early OA diagnosis. Recognizing current limitations of using a synchrotron for clinical imaging, we discuss its nascent utility for preclinical models, particularly longitudinal studies of live animal models of OA.


Subject(s)
Cartilage, Articular , Osteoarthritis, Knee , Percutaneous Coronary Intervention , Animals , Humans , Cartilage, Articular/diagnostic imaging , Osteoarthritis, Knee/diagnostic imaging , Synchrotrons , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Knee Joint/diagnostic imaging
3.
Mol Imaging Biol ; 24(4): 590-599, 2022 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35137326

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Multiple-image radiography (MIR) is an analyzer-based synchrotron X-ray imaging approach capable of dissociating absorption, refraction, and scattering components of X-ray interaction with the material. It generates additional image contrast mechanisms (besides absorption), especially in the case of soft tissues, while minimizing absorbed radiation dose. Our goal is to develop a contrast agent for MIR using ultrasound microbubbles by carrying out a systematic assessment of size, shell material, and concentration. PROCEDURES: Microbubbles were synthesized with two different shell materials: phospholipid and polyvinyl-alcohol. Polydisperse perfluorobutane-filled lipid microbubbles were divided into five size groups using centrifugation. Two distributions of air-filled polymer microbubbles were generated: 2-3 µm and 3-4 µm. A subset of polymer microbubbles 3-4 µm had iron oxide nanoparticles incorporated into their shell or coated on their surface. Microbubbles were immobilized in agar with different concentrations: 5 × 107, 5 × 106, and 5 × 105 MBs/ml. MIR was conducted on the BioMedical Imaging and Therapy beamline at the Canadian Light Source. Three images were generated: Gaussian amplitude, refraction, and ultra-small-angle X-ray scattering (USAXS). The contrast signal was quantified by measuring mean pixel values and comparing them with agar. RESULTS: No difference was detected in absorption or refraction images of all tested microbubbles. Using USAXS, a significant signal increase was observed with lipid microbubbles 6-10 µm at the highest concentration (p = 0.02), but no signal was observed at lower concentrations. CONCLUSIONS: These data indicate that lipid microbubbles 6-10 µm are candidates as contrast agents for MIR, specifically for USAXS. A minimum concentration of 5 × 107 microbubbles (lipid-shell 6-10 µm) per milliliter was needed to generate a detectable signal.


Subject(s)
Contrast Media , Microbubbles , Agar , Canada , Lipids , Polymers , Radiography , Synchrotrons
4.
Food Res Int ; 130: 108919, 2020 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32156367

ABSTRACT

Globally, the bakery industry has a target of reducing sodium content in bread products. However, removing salt results in changes in the quality of bread through effects on dough's gas phase during the breadmaking process. Using synchrotron X-ray microtomography, the objective of this study was to investigate how sodium reduction induced changes in the gas phase parameters (i.e., gas volume fraction, bubble size distribution (BSD) and its time evolution) of non-yeasted doughs made from a wide range of formulations (i.e., wheat cultivar and water content) prepared with different mixing times. As salt content was reduced, a lower gas volume was retained in the dough by the end of mixing. Less gas bubbles were also retained if doughs were prepared from a stronger wheat cultivar, higher water content, and/or mixed for a shorter time. Rates of change in the median (R0) and the width (ε) of the fitted lognormal radius dependence of bubble volume fraction [BVF(R)] indicated that reduced sodium content permitted disproportionation to proceed more rapidly. Higher water content or longer mixing time also resulted in faster disproportionation, indicating that water content and mixing time can be manipulated as a means of increasing bubble stability against disproportionation during low-sodium breadmaking. An examination of relative changes in dough's gas phase parameters arising from sodium reduction demonstrated that wheat cultivar, water content and mixing time all affected dough's tolerance to sodium reduction. Therefore, attainment of good bread crumb cell structure in low-sodium bread formulas is a function of salt's effects on dough rheology in addition to its effect on yeast activity, so that dough formulation and mixing conditions also need to be considered.


Subject(s)
Bread/analysis , Food Handling/methods , Sodium/chemistry , X-Ray Microtomography/methods , Flour , Synchrotrons
5.
Anat Rec (Hoboken) ; 297(2): 222-33, 2014 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24357499

ABSTRACT

Looking in microscopic detail at the 3D organization of initiating teeth within the embryonic jaw has long-proved technologically challenging because of the radio-translucency of these tiny un-mineralized oral tissues. Yet 3D image data showing changes in the physical relationships among developing tooth and jaw tissues are vital to understand the coordinated morphogenesis of vertebrate teeth and jaws as an animal grows and as species evolve. Here, we present a new synchrotron-based scanning solution to image odontogenesis in 3D and in histological detail using a silver-based contrast agent. We stained fixed, intact wild-type mice aged embryonic (E) day 10 to birth with 1% Protargol-S at 37°C for 12-32 hr. Specimens were scanned at 4-10 µm pixel size at 28 keV, just above the silver K-edge, using micro-computed tomography (µCT) at the Canadian Light Source synchrotron. Synchrotron µCT scans of silver-stained embryos showed even the earliest visible stages of tooth initiation, as well as many other tissue types and structures, in histological detail. Silver stain penetration was optimal for imaging structures in intact embryos E15 and younger. This silver stain method offers a powerful yet straightforward approach to visualize at high-resolution and in 3D the earliest stages of odontogenesis in situ, and demonstrates the important of studying the tooth organ in all three planes of view.


Subject(s)
Contrast Media , Imaging, Three-Dimensional/methods , Odontogenesis/physiology , Silver Proteins , Tooth/embryology , Tooth/pathology , Animals , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Models, Animal , Morphogenesis/physiology , Synchrotrons , Temperature , Time Factors , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods , Tooth/physiology
6.
J Am Chem Soc ; 125(3): 810-20, 2003 Jan 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12526682

ABSTRACT

Aggregates of the diacid form of tetra(p-carboxyphenyl)porphyrin (TCPP) are found to be stabilized in aqueous solution at low pH in the presence of poly(vinyl alcohol). At pH values in the range from about 1 to 4, a split Soret band is observed which is independent of counterion and tentatively assigned to a dimer species. As the pH is made lower than 1, the spectra evolve to reveal the presence of porphyrin aggregates. As in the case of the well-known aggregates of the related tetra(p-sulfonatophenyl)porphyrin (TSPP) diacid, the concentration of spectroscopically distinguishable aggregates increases with increasing ionic strength or decreasing pH. Unlike aggregates of TSPP, however, TCPP aggregates below pH 1 have visible absorption spectra which depend on the counterion, which is Cl(-) or NO(3)(-) in this study. In this work, we present visible absorption, light-scattering, and resonance Raman spectra of TCPP diacid in its monomer, dimer, and aggregated forms and attempt to understand the structural basis for counterion-dependent structure and excitonic coupling in the aggregates. Evidence is presented for intercalation of inorganic counterions between porphyrin molecules in the aggregate, an effect which to our knowledge has not been previously reported.

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