Micro-CT: Fancy Gadget or Indispensable Technology towards Accurate Quantification of Lung Disease and Therapy?

This webinar took place on July 9th 2020

Lung diseases such as fibrosis, viral infection and cancer are life-threatening conditions for which our knowledge on etiology and/or effective treatment options still contains important gaps. To unravel disease processes and to test novel therapeutic approaches, investigators typically rely on end-stage procedures (such as serum analysis, cyto-/chemokine profiles and selective tissue histology from animal models). These techniques are useful but provide only a snapshot of disease processes that are essentially dynamic in time and space. Technology allowing evaluation of live animals repeatedly is indispensable to gain better insight into the dynamics of lung disease progression and treatment. Computed tomography (CT) is a clinical standard and can have enormous benefits in a research context too. Yet, its implementation in basic and preclinical research laboratories lags behind. Nevertheless, the evidence for the benefits of micro-CT as an indispensable and safe tool to repeatedly evaluate lung disease progression and therapy efficacy in live animals is nothing but convincing.

This webinar took place on July 9th, 2020  

Who Should Attend

Basic, translational and clinical researchers in the field of lung disease research and preclinical therapy trials

Speakers

Dr Greetje Vande Velde

Assistant Professor, KU Leuven

Greetje Vande Velde studied Medicine, Bio-engineering and developed her expertise in multimodal non-invasive imaging (MRI, optical imaging, micro-CT) during fellowships at KU Leuven (Belgium), CRG (Barcelona) and Institut Pasteur (Paris). She is Professor at the Imaging and Pathology Department and MoSAIC imaging core facility (KU Leuven). Her research focuses on (infectious) lung diseases and therapy.

Kjell Laperre, PhD

Micro-CT Market Product & Applications Manager in the Bruker Biospin Pre-Clinical Imaging Division

Bsc in Medical science, Msc in Medical science, Catholic University of Leuven (Belgium) PhD in Experimental Medicine and Endocrinology, Catholic University of Leuven (Belgium) Application Scientist with Bruker microCT since 2012