1 / 13

Healthcare research in the Physics Department

S. Department of Physics, University of Surrey, Guildford, GU2 7XH, UK. S J Doran, P Jenneson, P McDonald, E Morton, N Spyrou. Healthcare research in the Physics Department. Dr S J Doran Lecturer in Magnetic Resonance Imaging Department of Physics

chuong
Télécharger la présentation

Healthcare research in the Physics Department

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. S Department of Physics, University of Surrey, Guildford, GU2 7XH, UK S J Doran, P Jenneson, P McDonald, E Morton, N Spyrou Healthcare research in the Physics Department Dr S J Doran Lecturer in Magnetic Resonance Imaging Department of Physics School of Electronics and Physical Sciences

  2. Structure of talk • Physics personnel with medical interests andhealthcare-related projects underway in Physics • Four brief case studies • MRI of the diffusion properties of tumours • Skin imaging • Radiation dosimetry • Characterisation of distortion in MRI

  3. Physics department “healthcare”personnel • Prof Tony CloughIon beam analysis (healthcare products) • Dr Simon DoranMagnetic Resonance ImagingRadiation dosimetrye-Health • Dr Walter GilboyRadiation dosimetry and protection • Dr Paul JennesonIon beam analysisX-ray CT micro-tomographyRadiation transport (Monte Carlo simulation) • Prof Peter McDonald Soft condensed matter PhysicsSkin imagingImaging of solvent ingress into dental resins • Dr Ed Morton (on secondment to Creative X-ray Ltd.)X-ray imagingNovel control systems for dose-reduction • Prof Nicholas SpyrouPositron Emission TomographyNuclear MedicineEpigastrographyTrace element detection in medicalconditions (e.g., Alzheimer’s)Ion beam analysis… and many more!

  4. Lancet 360, 307–308 (2002) MRI measurements of diffusion: (1) Cancer • Magnetic Resonance Imaging can be used to measure the speed of diffusion of water molecules. • The technique is widely applied in brain imaging, as there is a well-established link between altered diffusion values and stroke. • Extra-cranially, the technique has obvious potential, but this has been difficult to realise for a number of technical reasons.

  5. Diffusion coefficient / cm2 s-1 • The diffusion coefficient measured before treatment was correlated with the tumour response. % regression in tumour size after chemoradiation MRI measurements of diffusion: (1) Cancer • We developed novel MRI methodology to allow diffusion coefficients to be measured as part of a rectal tumour study. • Data acquisition is at the limit of what is technically possible with the current generation of scanners • With improved methodology, this could become a prognostic test. The Lancet 360, 307–308 (2002) A Dzik-Jurasz, C Domenig, S Doran et al.

  6. MRI measurements of diffusion: (2) Skin • Most Magnetic Resonance Imaging scanners are based round a magnet with a cylindrical geometry. • This is good for whole-body scans, but not for scanning thin samples. • Dr Glover and Prof McDonald put forward a novel magnet design, called GARField (Gradient At Right- Angles to Field). • Resolution of the new scanner is now of the order of tens of microns, rather than the few mm of a routine clinical scan. J Magn. Reson. 139, 90 P Glover, P Aptaker, J Bowler, E Ciampi, P McDonald

  7. Result after application of cream for 5 mins. 10 8 6 Intensity (a.u.) 4 “Dry” skin before cream applied (normal) 2 0 0 250 500 750 1000 Position (microns) MRI measurements of diffusion: (2) Skin • This type of imaging is very different from the sort of MR “pictures” we are used to seeing. • We can measure quantitatively the diffusion of compounds through the skin and follow them with time. P Glover, B Newling, P McDonald (UniS) M Dias, J Hadgraft (University of Cardiff)

  8. Target organ Organs to spare Treatment plan MRI-derived dose map Measurement of radiation dose in 3D • Modern radiotherapy treatments can be extremely complicated, in order to try and spare healthy tissue whilst killing the cancer. • Such treatments require extremely high spatial accuracy of delivery. • Hence, there is a pressing need to be able to measure the dose delivered. • Until recently, this has not been possible. Schematic prostate treatment Phys. Med. Biol. 43, 1113-1132 (1998) M Oldham et al.

  9. FXG spectral dose-response D(optical absorbance) / cm-1 • For a number of years, we have been investigating a novel method based on a gel that changes colour when irradiated from orange to purple. Wavelength / nm Measurement of radiation dose in 3D • Methods based on MRI have previously been used to measure the dose distribution in 3D. • However, these can be extremely slow (~ 6 hours for a 3-D scan). Phys. Med. Biol. (2001) S Doran, K Kleinkoerkamp, P Jenneson, E Morton, W Gilboy

  10. Unexposed gel Diffuser screen on which real shadow image forms Turntable controlled by acquisition computer via stepper motors • We have developed a new method of scanning the gels — 3-D opticalcomputed tomography (OCT). Exposed gel Scanning tank with matching medium CCD detector Lens  parallel beam • OCT is potentially two orders of magnitude cheaper than its MRI rival. Standard 50mm camera lens Cylindrical lens, pinhole and filter  pseudo point-source Hg lamp PC with frame-grabber card 10 Gy 57 mm 0 Gy Measurement of radiation dose in 3D • OCT is potentially two orders of magnitude faster than MRI. • Applications include brachytherapy, conformal radiotherapy and IMRT, radiation protection/ accident prevention. Phys. Med. Biol. (2001) S Doran, K Kleinkoerkamp, P Jenneson, E Morton, W Gilboy

  11. What would you say if you knew that MRI scans could turn this … … into this? Distortion in Magnetic Resonance Images • Would you rely on MRI data to plan your surgery or radiotherapy? S Doran (UniS), L Moore, S Reinsberg, M Leach (Institute of Cancer Research)

  12. By using a specially designed test object, we can work out how each pixel of the image is displaced. 10 • By analysing around 40,000 point-to-point correspondences between CT and MR images, we obtain 3-D distortion maps. x-distortion / mm -10 100 200 y / mm x / mm -100 -200 Distortion in Magnetic Resonance Images • We are researching how to correct MR images to make them reliable enough for surgery. S Doran (UniS), L Moore, S Reinsberg, M Leach (Institute of Cancer Research)

  13. Data from the test object is used in conjunction with patient image data in order to produce distortion corrected maps. • The eventual aim is to make it possible to eliminate the necessity for CT scans in the planning of some radiotherapy treatments.No radiation Less patient discomfort / inconvenience Saves NHS money Distortion in Magnetic Resonance Images S Doran (UniS), L Moore, S Reinsberg, M Leach (Institute of Cancer Research)

More Related