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Resolution improvement in emission optical projection tomography

Johnathon R Walls et al 2007 Phys. Med. Biol. 52 2775-2790   doi: 10.1088/0031-9155/52/10/010  Help

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Johnathon R Walls1, John G Sled1, James Sharpe2 and R Mark Henkelman1
1 Mouse Imaging Centre, Hospital for Sick Children, University of Toronto, 555 University Avenue, Toronto, ON M5G 1X8, Canada
2 EMBL/CRG Systems Biology Unit, Centre for Genomic Regulation, Dr. Aiguader, 88, 08003 Barcelona, Spain
E-mail: johnathon.walls@utoronto.ca

Abstract. A new imaging technique called emission optical projection tomography (eOPT), essentially an optical version of single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), provides molecular specificity, resolution on the order of microns to tens of microns, and large specimen coverage (≈ 1 cubic centimetre). It is ideally suited to gene expression studies in embryos. Reconstructed eOPT images suffer from blurring that worsens as the distance from the axis of rotation increases. This blur is caused in part by the defocusing of the lens' point-spread function, which increases with object distance from the focal plane. In this paper, we describe a frequency space filter based on the frequency–distance relationship of sinograms to deconvolve the distance-dependent point-spread function and exclude highly defocused data from the eOPT sinograms prior to reconstruction. The method is shown to reduce the volume at half-maximum of the reconstructed point-spread function to approximately 20% the original, and the volume at 10% maximum to approximately 6% the original. As an illustration, the visibility of fine details in the vasculature of a 9.5 day old mouse embryo is dramatically improved.

Print publication: Issue 10 (21 May 2007)
Received 18 September 2006, in final form 8 March 2007
Published 27 April 2007

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