Paper
15 September 2008 Comparative micro computed tomography study of a vertebral body
Susanne Drews, Felix Beckmann, Julia Herzen, Oliver Brunke, Phil Salmon, Sebastian Friess, Andres Laib, Bruno Koller, Thomas Hemberger, Magdalena Müller-Gerbl, Bert Müller
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Investigations of bony tissues are often performed using micro computed tomography based on X-rays, since the calcium distribution leads to superior contrast. Osteoporotic bone, for example, can be well compared with healthy one with respect to density and morphology. Degenerative and rheumatoid diseases usually start, however, at the bone-cartilage-interface, which is hardly accessible. The direct influence on the bone itself becomes only visible at later stage. For the development of suitable therapies against degenerative cartilage damages the exact three-dimensional description of the bone-cartilage interface is vital, as demonstrated for transplanted cartilage-cells or bone-cartilage-constructs in animal models. So far, the morphological characterization was restricted to magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with poor spatial resolution or to time-consuming histological sectioning with appropriate spatial resolution only in two rather arbitrarily chosen directions. Therefore, one should develop μCT to extract the features of low absorbing cartilage. The morphology and the volume of the inter-vertebral cartilage disc of lumbar motion segments have been determined for one PMMA embedded specimen. Tomograms were recorded using nanotom® (Phoenix|x-ray, Wunstorf, Germany), μCT 35TM (Scanco Medical, Brütisellen, Switzerland), 1172TM and 1174TM (both Skyscan, Kontich, Belgium), as well as using the SRμCT at HASYLAB/DESY. Conventional and SRμCT can provide the morphology and the volume of cartilage between bones. Increasing the acquisition time, the signal-to-noise ratio becomes better and better but the prominent artifacts in conventional μCT as the result of inhomogeneously distributed bony tissue prevents the exact segmentation of cartilage. SRμCT allows segmenting the cartilage but requires long periods of expensive beam-time to obtain reasonable contrast.
© (2008) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Susanne Drews, Felix Beckmann, Julia Herzen, Oliver Brunke, Phil Salmon, Sebastian Friess, Andres Laib, Bruno Koller, Thomas Hemberger, Magdalena Müller-Gerbl, and Bert Müller "Comparative micro computed tomography study of a vertebral body", Proc. SPIE 7078, Developments in X-Ray Tomography VI, 70780C (15 September 2008); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.793815
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Cited by 12 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Bone

Cartilage

Tissues

Absorption

X-rays

3D modeling

Polymethylmethacrylate

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