In vivo tumor detection with combined MR-Photoacoustic-Thermoacoustic imaging

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Abstract

Here, we report a new method using combined magnetic resonance (MR)-Photoacoustic (PA)-Thermoacoustic (TA) imaging techniques, and demonstrate its unique ability for in vivo cancer detection using tumor-bearing mice. Circular scanning TA and PA imaging systems were used to recover the dielectric and optical property distributions of three colon carcinoma bearing mice While a 7.0-T magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) unit with a mouse body volume coil was utilized for high resolution structural imaging of the same mice. Three plastic tubes filled with soybean sauce were used as fiducial markers for the co-registration of MR, PA and TA images. The resulting fused images provided both enhanced tumor margin and contrast relative to the surrounding normal tissues. In particular, some finger-like protrusions extending into the surrounding tissues were revealed in the MR/TA infused images. These results show that the tissue functional optical and dielectric properties provided by PA and TA images along with the anatomical structure by MRI in one picture make accurate tumor identification easier. This combined MR-PA-TA-imaging strategy has the potential to offer a clinically useful triple-modality tool for accurate cancer detection and for intraoperative surgical navigation.

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Huang, L., Cai, W., Zhao, Y., Wu, D., Wang, L., Wang, Y., … Jiang, H. (2016). In vivo tumor detection with combined MR-Photoacoustic-Thermoacoustic imaging. Journal of Innovative Optical Health Sciences, 9(5). https://doi.org/10.1142/S1793545816500152

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