Using Advanced Imaging to Study Fish

Although mammals are the most commonly utilized laboratory animal, laboratory animal medicine continually seeks to replace them with animals of lower phylogenic classification. Fish are becoming increasingly important as investigators seek alternative animal models for research. Fish can provide an...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Browning, Zoe Swezy
Other Authors: Kier, Ann, MacKenzie, Duncan, Lenox, Mark
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
PET
CT
FDG
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/151000
Description
Summary:Although mammals are the most commonly utilized laboratory animal, laboratory animal medicine continually seeks to replace them with animals of lower phylogenic classification. Fish are becoming increasingly important as investigators seek alternative animal models for research. Fish can provide an economical and feasible alternative to typical mammalian models; moreover, many fish, which have comparatively short life spans, can easily reproduce in the laboratory. One key area of animal health research in which fish have been underutilized is the field of advanced imaging. Although many images of fish have been captured through the use of computed tomography (CT), radiography, and ultrasonography, these images have been primarily utilized for anatomical study. In addition, fish have never before been studied with positron emission tomography/ computed tomography (PET/CT). My objectives were to determine if these imaging techniques can be used to obtain physiological information from fish, therefore making it more likely that fish can be utilized as replacement animals using these new imaging techniques (CT, PET/CT). I performed two different types of studies to assess the potential application of advanced imaging techniques to fish. In the first experiment, microCT was used to characterize otolith deformity in vitamin C deficient captive-raised red drum and relate the deformity to behavioral and physiological changes. I found that the normal and abnormal fish had statistically significant differences in behavior, cortisol levels, and otolith volume and density. MicroCT assessment of abnormal fish revealed operculum abnormalities, malocclusions, and several types of otolith malformations. Therefore, the affected fish had not only an abnormal skeletal appearance but also significantly abnormal behavior and cortisol responses. In the second experiment, fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography/ computed tomography (FDG-PET/CT) was used to quantify glucose uptake in select organs prior to carcinogenesis ...