Nanoscale x-ray holotomography of human brain tissue with phase retrieval based on multienergy recordings

2020-01-22 | journal article; research paper. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

Jump to: Cite & Linked | Documents & Media | Details | Version history

Cite this publication

​Nanoscale x-ray holotomography of human brain tissue with phase retrieval based on multienergy recordings​
Robisch, A. L. ; Eckermann, M.; Töpperwien, M. ; Meer, F. van der ; Stadelmann-Nessler, C.   & Salditt, T. ​ (2020) 
Journal of Medical Imaging7(1) art. 013501​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1117/1.JMI.7.1.013501 

Documents & Media

License

GRO License GRO License

Details

Authors
Robisch, Anna Lena ; Eckermann, Marina; Töpperwien, Mareike ; Meer, Franziska van der ; Stadelmann-Nessler, Christine ; Salditt, Tim 
Abstract
X-ray cone-beam holotomography of unstained tissue from the human central nervous system reveals details down to subcellular length scales. This visualization of variations in the electron density of the sample is based on phase-contrast techniques using intensities formed by self-interference of the beam between object and detector. Phase retrieval inverts diffraction and overcomes the phase problem by constraints such as several measurements at different Fresnel numbers for a single projection. Therefore, the object-to-detector distance (defocus) can be varied. However, for cone-beam geometry, changing defocus changes magnification, which can be problematic in view of image processing and resolution. Alternatively, the photon energy can be altered (multi-E). Far from absorption edges, multi-E data yield the wavelength-independent electron density. We present the multi-E holotomography at the Göttingen Instrument for Nano-Imaging with X-Rays (GINIX) setup of the P10 beamline at Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron. The instrument is based on a combined optics of elliptical mirrors and an x-ray waveguide positioned in the focal plane for further coherence, spatial filtering, and high numerical aperture. Previous results showed the suitability of this instrument for nanoscale tomography of unstained brain tissue. We demonstrate that upon energy variation, the focal spot is stable enough for imaging. To this end, a double-crystal monochromator and automated alignment routines are required. Three tomograms of human brain tissue were recorded and jointly analyzed using phase retrieval based on the contrast transfer function formalism generalized to multiple photon energies. Variations of the electron density of the sample are successfully reconstructed.
Issue Date
22-January-2020
Journal
Journal of Medical Imaging 
Project
EXC 2067: Multiscale Bioimaging 
Organization
Institut für Röntgenphysik 
Working Group
RG Salditt (Structure of Biomolecular Assemblies and X-Ray Physics) 
RG Stadelmann-Nessler 
ISSN
2329-4302
Language
English
Subject(s)
x-ray imaging; biomedical tomography

Reference

Citations


Social Media