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Reduction of postmortem angiography-induced tissue edema by using polyethylene glycol as a contrast agent dissolver
Authors:Jackowski Christian  Bolliger Stephan  Aghayev Emin  Christe Andreas  Kilchoer Thomas  Aebi Beat  Périnat Therese  Dirnhofer Richard  Thali Michael J
Institution:Institute of Forensic Medicine, University of Bern, Bühlstrasse 20, CH-3012 Bern, Switzerland. christian.jackowski@irm.unibe.ch
Abstract:Postmortem investigation is increasingly supported by computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging, in which postmortem minimal invasive angiography has become important. The newly introduced approach using an aqueous contrast agent solution provided excellent vessel visualization but was suspected to possibly cause tissue edema artifacts in histological investigations. The aim of this study was to investigate on a porcine heart model whether it is possible to influence the contrast agent distribution within the soft tissue by changing its viscosity by dissolving the contrast agent in polyethylene glycol (PEG) as a matrix medium. High-resolution CT scans after injection showed that viscosities above c. 15 mPa s (65% PEG) prevented a contrast agent distribution within the capillary bed of the left ventricular myocardium. Thereby, the precondition of edema artifacts could be reduced. Its minimal invasive application on human corpses needs to be further adapted as the flow resistance is expected to differ between different tissues.
Keywords:forensic science  postmortem angiography  forensic radiology  digital autopsy  virtopsy  minimally invasive autopsy  postmortem imaging  imaging autopsy  computed tomography  polyethylene glycol (PEG)
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