Title :
SIC, an intracerebral radiosensitive probe for in vivo neuropharmacology investigations in small laboratory animals: theoretical considerations and practical characteristics
Author :
Pain, F. ; Laniece, P. ; Mastrippolito, R. ; Charon, Y. ; Comar, D. ; Leviel, V. ; Pujol, J.F. ; Valentin, L.
Author_Institution :
Inst. de Phys. Nucl., Univ. de Paris-Sud, Orsay, France
fDate :
2/1/2000 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Although high-resolution tomographs provide a new approach that strongly simplifies the measurement of in vivo tracer biodistribution and kinetics in small animals, they suffer from an important drawback: the need for animal anesthesia or immobilization, which restricts the neurophysiological investigations. Furthermore, quantitative in vivo experiments realized on the brain sometimes only require a simple measurement of the radioactivity achieved on a few local points and do not necessarily imply the use of a tomograph, which is a detector of high cost. These constraints led the authors to develop an interacerebral β sensitive probe, sonde intracerebrate (SIC) (French acronym of intracerebral probe) that will allow chronic measurements of the neurophysiological activity in awake and unrestrained small animals. The volume to which the probe is sensitive and the noise contributions to the relevant signal have been evaluated through Monte Carlo simulations. Characterizations of a first prototype based on a small piece of scintillating fiber (500-μm diameter and 1-mm length) fused to a same diameter optical fiber coupled in turn to a photomultiplier are also presented. A first configuration of the detector is finally proposed
Keywords :
biological techniques; brain; laboratory techniques; neurophysiology; probes; 1 mm; 500 mum; Monte Carlo simulations; awake unrestrained small animals; chronic measurements; interacerebral β sensitive probe; intracerebral radiosensitive probe; neuropharmacology investigations; noise contributions; photomultiplier; scintillating fiber; small laboratory animals; Anesthesia; Animals; Costs; Detectors; In vivo; Kinetic theory; Optical fibers; Optical noise; Probes; Silicon carbide;
Journal_Title :
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on