For this purpose, the researchers examined the lungs of a COVID-19 victim in cooperation with the European Synchrotron Research Facility (ESRF), the world's third largest particle accelerator in Grenoble, France. Thanks to the latest technology, a three-dimensional image of the complete organ could be generated for the first time using high-resolution X-rays. The work has resulted in two publications in renowned journals: The technical procedure is published in Nature Methods, the clinical application in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine (Blue Journal).
The new X-ray technique works much like a computed tomography (CT) scan in a hospital. However, the resolution is a hundred times higher. "In the CT scan, we can show blood vessels in the millimetre range," Professor Jonigk explains. The new technology called Hierarchical Phase Contrast Tomography (HiP-CT) is able to image the finest vessels with a diameter of five micrometres - about one tenth the thickness of a hair. HiP-CT makes it possible to penetrate into the depths of the lungs and depict even the smallest structures down to individual cells. "Until now, this resolution was only possible with a microscope, but only in two dimensions and for small tissue samples," says the lung specialist. HiP-CT can do much more. With the new technique, it is possible for the first time to image an entire organ three-dimensionally and greatly magnified without damaging it. "This made it possible to examine structures that are at the limits of resolution and to gain an overview of the changes in the entire lung tissue," emphasises the pathologist.
In this way, the scientists discover what seems to go wrong with COVID-19. There are two separate blood systems in the lungs - one belongs to the pulmonary circulation and is responsible for supplying oxygen to the entire body, the other supplies the lung tissue itself with the vital gas. In a healthy lung, there are sometimes a few connections between small vessels of the two systems. In the damaged COVID-19 lung, on the other hand, the two blood systems formed numerous such cross-links in many areas. "This large number of irreversible shunts acts like a wide-open sluice gate and ensures that the oxygen supply in the entire body no longer functions," explains Professor Jonigk. He suspects that the cause is a dysregulation of the lung itself, which thus tries to compensate for the lack of oxygen caused by the SARS-CoV2 infection in the short term in a kind of short-circuit reaction.
The brilliant, high-resolution technology will revolutionise medical imaging and our understanding of the structure of our bodies, says Professor Jonigk. "Now we have the ability to visualise tiny structures three-dimensionally in their proper spatial context on a large scale," he explains. The research team has already begun to create a more advanced organ atlas. In addition to the COVID-19-damaged lung, it already contains images of several healthy human organs such as the brain, lungs, heart, kidneys and spleen from deceased body donations. The pathologist is also convinced that the HiP-CT X-ray technology will provide new insights into numerous diseases, including cancer and Alzheimer's disease.
The work was done in cooperation between the MHH Institute of Pathology and, among others, the German Centre for Lung Research in Hanover (DZL Breath), University College London and the University Medical Center Mainz.
MEDICA-tradefair.com; Source: Medizinische Hochschule Hannover