PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

Phase-Contrast Hounsfield Units of Fixated and Non-Fixated Soft-Tissue Samples.

  • Marian Willner,
  • Gabriel Fior,
  • Mathias Marschner,
  • Lorenz Birnbacher,
  • Jonathan Schock,
  • Christian Braun,
  • Alexander A Fingerle,
  • Peter B Noël,
  • Ernst J Rummeny,
  • Franz Pfeiffer,
  • Julia Herzen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0137016
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 8
p. e0137016

Abstract

Read online

X-ray phase-contrast imaging is a novel technology that achieves high soft-tissue contrast. Although its clinical impact is still under investigation, the technique may potentially improve clinical diagnostics. In conventional attenuation-based X-ray computed tomography, radiological diagnostics are quantified by Hounsfield units. Corresponding Hounsfield units for phase-contrast imaging have been recently introduced, enabling a setup-independent comparison and standardized interpretation of imaging results. Thus far, the experimental values of few tissue types have been reported; these values have been determined from fixated tissue samples. This study presents phase-contrast Hounsfield units for various types of non-fixated human soft tissues. A large variety of tissue specimens ranging from adipose, muscle and connective tissues to liver, kidney and pancreas tissues were imaged by a grating interferometer with a rotating-anode X-ray tube and a photon-counting detector. Furthermore, we investigated the effects of formalin fixation on the quantitative phase-contrast imaging results.