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Автор Donald L McEachron
Автор Jonathan Nissanov
Автор Oleh J Tretiak
Дата выпуска 1997-06-01
dc.description Tritium quenching refers to the situation in which estimates of tritium content generated by film autoradiography depend on the chemical composition of the tissue as well as on the concentration of the radioisotope. When analysing thin brain sections, for example, regions rich in lipid content generate reduced optical densities on x-ray film compared with lipid-poor regions even when the total tissue concentration of tritium in those regions is identical. We hypothesize that the dried thickness of regions within sections depends upon the relative concentrations and types of lipid within the regions. Areas low in white matter dry thinner than areas high in white matter, leading to a relative enrichment of tritium in the thinner regions. To test this model, a series of brain pastes were made with different concentrations of grey and white matter and impregnated with equal amounts of tritium. The thickness of dried sections was compared with percentage of white matter and apparent radioactive content as determined by autoradiogram analysis. The results demonstrated that thickness increased, and apparent radioactivity decreased, with higher percentages of white matter. In the second experiment, thickness measurements from dried sections were successfully used to correct the apparent radioisotope content of autoradiograms created from tritium containing white- and grey-matter tissue slices. We conclude that within-section thickness variation is the major physical cause for `tritium quenching'.
Формат application.pdf
Издатель Institute of Physics Publishing
Название Region-specific tritium enrichment, and not differential -absorption, is the major cause of `quenching' in film autoradiography
Тип paper
DOI 10.1088/0031-9155/42/6/009
Electronic ISSN 1361-6560
Print ISSN 0031-9155
Журнал Physics in Medicine and Biology
Том 42
Первая страница 1121
Последняя страница 1132
Выпуск 6

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