Quantification of lung damage in an elastase-induced mouse model of emphysema

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Abstract

Objective. To define the sensitivity of microcomputed tomography- (micro-CT-) derived descriptors for the quantification of lung damage caused by elastase instillation. Materials and Methods. The lungs of 30 elastase treated and 30 control A/J mice were analyzed 1, 6, 12, and 24 hours and 7 and 17 days after elastase instillation using (i) breath-hold-gated micro-CT, (ii) pulmonary function tests (PFTs), (iii) RT-PCR for RNA cytokine expression, and (iv) histomorphometry. For the latter, an automatic, parallel software toolset was implemented that computes the airspace enlargement descriptors: mean linear intercept (L m) and weighted means of airspace diameters (D 0, D 1, and D 2). A Support Vector Classifier was trained and tested based on three nonhistological descriptors using D 2 as ground truth. Results. D 2 detected statistically significant differences (P 0.01) between the groups at all time points. Furthermore, D 2 at 1 hour (24 hours) was significantly lower (P 0.01) than D 2 at 24 hours (7 days). The classifier trained on the micro-CT-derived descriptors achieves an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.95 well above the others (PFTS AUC = 0.71; cytokine AUC = 0.88). Conclusion. Micro-CT-derived descriptors are more sensitive than the other methods compared, to detect in vivo early signs of the disease. © 2012 Arrate Muñoz-Barrutia et al.

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APA

Muñoz-Barrutia, A., Ceresa, M., Artaechevarria, X., Montuenga, L. M., & Ortiz-De-Solorzano, C. (2012). Quantification of lung damage in an elastase-induced mouse model of emphysema. International Journal of Biomedical Imaging, 2012. https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/734734

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