Micrometer-resolution X-ray tomographic full-volume reconstruction of an intact post-mortem juvenile rat lung

Histochem Cell Biol. 2021 Feb;155(2):215-226. doi: 10.1007/s00418-020-01868-8. Epub 2020 Mar 18.

Abstract

In this article, we present an X-ray tomographic imaging method that is well suited for pulmonary disease studies in animal models to resolve the full pathway from gas intake to gas exchange. Current state-of-the-art synchrotron-based tomographic phase-contrast imaging methods allow for three-dimensional microscopic imaging data to be acquired non-destructively in scan times of the order of seconds with good soft tissue contrast. However, when studying multi-scale hierarchically structured objects, such as the mammalian lung, the overall sample size typically exceeds the field of view illuminated by the X-rays in a single scan and the necessity for achieving a high spatial resolution conflicts with the need to image the whole sample. Several image stitching and calibration techniques to achieve extended high-resolution fields of view have been reported, but those approaches tend to fail when imaging non-stable samples, thus precluding tomographic measurements of large biological samples, which are prone to degradation and motion during extended scan times. In this work, we demonstrate a full-volume three-dimensional reconstruction of an intact rat lung under immediate post-mortem conditions and at an isotropic voxel size of (2.75 µm)3. We present the methodology for collecting multiple local tomographies with 360° extended field of view scans followed by locally non-rigid volumetric stitching. Applied to the lung, it allows to resolve the entire pulmonary structure from the trachea down to the parenchyma in a single dataset. The complete dataset is available online ( https://doi.org/10.16907/7eb141d3-11f1-47a6-9d0e-76f8832ed1b2 ).

Keywords: Fast tomography; Image reconstruction; Large volume tomography; Lung imaging; X-ray tomography.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Imaging, Three-Dimensional*
  • Lung Diseases / metabolism
  • Lung Diseases / pathology*
  • Rats
  • Rats, Wistar
  • Tomography, X-Ray Computed*