Noncontact Respiratory Motion Detection in Anesthetized Rodents

Author:

Donnelley Martin1,Lagerquist Lina2,Cmielewski Patricia3,Reyne Nikki1,Morgan Kaye4,Parsons David1

Affiliation:

1. Robinson Research Institute,; Adelaide Medical School, University of Adelaide, SA, 5001, Australia; Respiratory and Sleep Medicine, Women's and Children's Hospital, North Adelaide, SA, 5006, Australia

2. College of Science and Engineering, Flinders University, SA, 5042, Australia

3. Robinson Research Institute, ; Adelaide Medical School, University of Adelaide, SA, 5001, Australia; Respiratory and Sleep Medicine, Women's and Children's Hospital, North Adelaide, SA, 5006, Australia

4. School of Physics and Astronomy, Monash University, Clayton, Vic, 3800, Australia

Abstract

Small animal physiology studies are often complicated, but the level of complexity is greatly increased when performing live-animal X-ray imaging studies at synchrotron radiation facilities. This is because these facilities are typically not designed specifically for biomedical research, and the animals and image detectors are located away from the researchers in a radiation enclosure. In respiratory X-ray imaging studies one challenge is the detection of respiration in free-breathing anaesthetised rodents, to enable images to be acquired at specific phases of the breath and for detecting changes in respiratory rate. We have previously used a Philtec RC60 sensor interfaced to a PowerLab data acquisition system and custom-designed timing hub to perform this task. Here we evaluated the Panasonic HL-G108 for respiratory sensing. The performance of the two sensors for accurate and reliable breath detection was directly compared using a single anesthetized rat. We also assessed how an infrared heat lamp used to maintain body temperature affected sensor performance. Based on positive results from these comparisons, the HL-G108 sensor was then used for respiratory motion detection in tracheal X-ray imaging studies of 21 rats at the SPring-8 Synchrotron, including its use for gated image acquisition. The results of that test were compared to a similar imaging study that used the RC60 for respiratory detection in 19 rats. Finally, the HL-G108 sensor was tested on 5 mice to determine its effectiveness on smaller species. The results showed that the HL-G108 is much more robust and easier to configure than the RC60 sensor and produces an analog signal that is amenable to stable peak detection. Furthermore, gated image acquisition produced sequences with substantially reduced motion artefacts, enabling the additional benefit of reduced radiation dose through the application of shuttering. Finally, the mouse experiments showed that the HL-G108 is equally capable of detecting respiration in this smaller species.

Publisher

American Association for Laboratory Animal Science

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology

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