Applications of XRF, NAA and low-kV radiographic techniques in the study of body composition and diseased tissue

Members of this group have responded to a number of challenging health issues by attempting to devise sensitive XRF, NAA and low-kV radiographic measurement systems for both in vivo and in vitro applications. These studies are generally either of toxicological importance, examine potential for diag...

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Main Authors: Bradley, D.A., Ng, K.H., Green, S., Mountford, P.J., Shukri, A., Evans, J.
Format: Article
Published: Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya 1996
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/24496/
https://jummec.um.edu.my/issue/view/661/Vol.1%2C%20No.2%2C%201996
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spelling my.um.eprints.244962021-03-23T07:18:47Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/24496/ Applications of XRF, NAA and low-kV radiographic techniques in the study of body composition and diseased tissue Bradley, D.A. Ng, K.H. Green, S. Mountford, P.J. Shukri, A. Evans, J. R Medicine Members of this group have responded to a number of challenging health issues by attempting to devise sensitive XRF, NAA and low-kV radiographic measurement systems for both in vivo and in vitro applications. These studies are generally either of toxicological importance, examine potential for diagnosing the presence of disease, or offer effective means for monitoring potentially harmful side-effects of therapy. Particular examples include the in vivo XRF investigation of human skeletal uptake of Pb in working and living environments, in vivo XRF monitoring of elevated levels of Fe in skin (indicating the presence of an undesirable side-effect of the treatment of thalassaemia), in vivo NAA monitoring of elevated levels of Al in bone (indicating an undesirable side-effect of the treatment of chronic renal failure) and in vitro characterization, by means of low-kV imaging, of a range of calcification parameters in healthy and diseased breast tissue. The latter investigation has been conducted in association with an in vitro NAA study of concentrations of trace elements in the same types of tissue. Figures of merit for the various measurement systems have been obtained in terms of minimum detectable levels and concentrations (MDL's and MDC's) and where applicable, image related parameters. Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya 1996-12 Article PeerReviewed Bradley, D.A. and Ng, K.H. and Green, S. and Mountford, P.J. and Shukri, A. and Evans, J. (1996) Applications of XRF, NAA and low-kV radiographic techniques in the study of body composition and diseased tissue. Journal of the University of Malaya Medical Centre (JUMMEC), 1 (2). p. 62. ISSN 1823-7339 https://jummec.um.edu.my/issue/view/661/Vol.1%2C%20No.2%2C%201996
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic R Medicine
spellingShingle R Medicine
Bradley, D.A.
Ng, K.H.
Green, S.
Mountford, P.J.
Shukri, A.
Evans, J.
Applications of XRF, NAA and low-kV radiographic techniques in the study of body composition and diseased tissue
description Members of this group have responded to a number of challenging health issues by attempting to devise sensitive XRF, NAA and low-kV radiographic measurement systems for both in vivo and in vitro applications. These studies are generally either of toxicological importance, examine potential for diagnosing the presence of disease, or offer effective means for monitoring potentially harmful side-effects of therapy. Particular examples include the in vivo XRF investigation of human skeletal uptake of Pb in working and living environments, in vivo XRF monitoring of elevated levels of Fe in skin (indicating the presence of an undesirable side-effect of the treatment of thalassaemia), in vivo NAA monitoring of elevated levels of Al in bone (indicating an undesirable side-effect of the treatment of chronic renal failure) and in vitro characterization, by means of low-kV imaging, of a range of calcification parameters in healthy and diseased breast tissue. The latter investigation has been conducted in association with an in vitro NAA study of concentrations of trace elements in the same types of tissue. Figures of merit for the various measurement systems have been obtained in terms of minimum detectable levels and concentrations (MDL's and MDC's) and where applicable, image related parameters.
format Article
author Bradley, D.A.
Ng, K.H.
Green, S.
Mountford, P.J.
Shukri, A.
Evans, J.
author_facet Bradley, D.A.
Ng, K.H.
Green, S.
Mountford, P.J.
Shukri, A.
Evans, J.
author_sort Bradley, D.A.
title Applications of XRF, NAA and low-kV radiographic techniques in the study of body composition and diseased tissue
title_short Applications of XRF, NAA and low-kV radiographic techniques in the study of body composition and diseased tissue
title_full Applications of XRF, NAA and low-kV radiographic techniques in the study of body composition and diseased tissue
title_fullStr Applications of XRF, NAA and low-kV radiographic techniques in the study of body composition and diseased tissue
title_full_unstemmed Applications of XRF, NAA and low-kV radiographic techniques in the study of body composition and diseased tissue
title_sort applications of xrf, naa and low-kv radiographic techniques in the study of body composition and diseased tissue
publisher Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya
publishDate 1996
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/24496/
https://jummec.um.edu.my/issue/view/661/Vol.1%2C%20No.2%2C%201996
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score 13.211869