Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,458,148 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

X ray excels: technique brings a new image to medicine.


Imaging soft tissue in detail has required enormous particle accelerators that span several city blocks. A new method may soon bring this valuable diagnostic capability into hospital settings. There, researchers say, it will provide physicians with unprecedented power to spot tumors, clogged arteries, and other soft-tissue problems.

Researchers have long known that phase-contrast X-ray imaging can yield stunning pictures of soft tissue. Currently, however, the technique requires X rays from a synchrotron synchrotron: see particle accelerator.
synchrotron

Cyclic particle accelerator in which the particle is confined to its orbit by a magnetic field. The strength of the magnetic field increases as the particle's momentum increases.
, a particle accelerator measuring 300 meters or more in diameter.

"Phase-sensitive X-ray imaging can produce images that show much more detail in tissue structure, but none of the techniques could be used efficiently in a hospital-based setup with small X-ray sources," says Franz Pfeiffer of the Paul Scherrer Institute The Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI) is a multi-disciplinary research institute which belongs to the Swiss ETH-Komplex covering also the ETH Zurich and EPFL. It was established in 1988 by merging in 1960 established EIR (Eidgenössisches Institut für R  in Villigen, Switzerland.

Now, his team reports an advance that it says will enable radiologists to perform phase-contrast imaging using conventional hospital X-ray machines. The team describes its innovation in the Aug. 8 Optics Express, an online journal.

"The beauty of this is ... it could potentially allow you to use more-normal sources of X rays, like X-ray tubes," comments L. Dean Chapman of the University of Saskatchewan The University of Saskatchewan (U of S) is a coeducational public research university located on the east side of the South Saskatchewan River in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada. The University is celebrating its centennial year in 2007.  in Saskatoon Saskatoon (săskətn`), city (1991 pop. 186,058), S central Sask., Canada, on the South Saskatchewan River. .

Conventional X-ray techniques take advantage of the fact that materials in the body absorb X rays to different extents. Bone, for instance, absorbs more X rays than soft tissue does.

However, different types of soft tissue, such as a cancerous patch of breast tissue and a normal patch, often have only tiny, hard-to-detect variations in absorption, says Pfeiffer. As a result, soft-tissue imaging methods such as mammography mammography, diagnostic procedure that uses low-dose X rays to detect abnormalities in the breasts. The early diagnosis of breast cancer made possible by the routine use of mammography for screening women increases a woman's treatment alternatives and improves her  must use high doses of radiation, which can pose health risks for the patient, to yield even low-resolution images.

Phase-contrast X-ray imaging relies instead on refraction refraction, in physics, deflection of a wave on passing obliquely from one transparent medium into a second medium in which its speed is different, as the passage of a light ray from air into glass. , or changes in the angular trajectory of X rays. Just as light rays bend when they enter water from air, X rays deflect as they travel through objects of varying densities. This deflection can be precisely measured to produce highly detailed images.

Chapman notes that phase-contrast imaging can use lower-wavelength X rays than conventional methods do. Because the low-wavelength rays tend to pass through tissue, the procedure delivers a much lower radiation dose to the patient than do standard X-ray methods.

"The problem is, it's hard to do," Chapman says.

Pfeiffer says that his team has simplified the task with a better analyzer for refracted re·fract  
tr.v. re·fract·ed, re·fract·ing, re·fracts
1. To deflect (light, for example) from a straight path by refraction.

2.
 X rays. The team uses a pair of gratings, each scored with 2-micron- wide furrows, to produce an interference pattern from deflected rays. A detector then produces an image from this pattern. Team member Christian David invented the grating.

Previous analyzers could resolve only a very intense X-ray beam x-ray beam,
n the spatial distribution of radiation emerging from a radiograph generator or source. The colloquial term for radiographic beam. See radiographic beam.
, a beam of a single wavelength, or a beam of highly parallel rays. Coauthor Timm Weitkamp of the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility

ESRF redirects here, for the medical condition, see end stage renal failure


The European Synchrotron Radiation Facility is a joint research facility supported by 18 European countries situated in Grenoble, France.
 in Grenoble, France, says the new gratings can handle the less intense, multiwavelength, and multidirectional mul·ti·di·rec·tion·al  
adj.
1. Reaching out in several directions: a multidirectional campaign.

2.
 beams that emerge from typical hospital X-ray tubes.

As a demonstration, Weitkamp and his coworkers have used their grating with a synchrotron source to image the leg joints of a small spider. They say that the first experiments using a standard X-ray tube indicate that their technique also could be used in clinical settings.
COPYRIGHT 2005 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Moreira, N.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Aug 20, 2005
Words:528
Previous Article:Comb over chemicals: tool may rid heads of pesticideproof lice.
Next Article:Bitty beasts of burden: algae can carry cargo.
Topics:



Related Articles
T rays for two: terahertz waves give rise to a new imaging technique.(Cover Story)
Smart molecules may enhance images. (smart contrast agents developed to enhance magnetic resonance imaging)
Rapid X ray opens window to arteries. (new, ultrafast CT scanners used to predict coronary artery disease, which could reduce the need for...
Health care. (Newsmakers).
X-ray inspection system.(APEX Product Preview)
X-ray inspection system.(NEPCON East Product Preview)
RAD-2. Comparison of radiographic techniques to optimize image analysis for evaluating traumatized bone using a rat as a model.(Section on...
Fully automatic x-ray inspection for tire manufacturers--part 1.(Process Machinery)
Pretty in pictures: details of molecular machinery gain Nobel.(Roger D. Kornberg )
Medical Webwatch.(Special Section)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles