Ortho-positronium Lifetime For Soft-tissue Classification
Ashish V. Avachat, Kholod H. Mahmoud, Anthony G. Leja, Jiajie J. Xu,, Mark A. Anastasio, Mayandi Sivaguru, and Angela Di Fulvio

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that ortho-positronium lifetime measurements can effectively differentiate soft tissues based on their lipid content, offering a non-invasive alternative to current imaging techniques like X-ray phase-contrast imaging.
Contribution
The paper introduces the use of ortho-positronium lifetime as a novel, sensitive probe for soft-tissue classification, outperforming X-ray phase-contrast imaging in tissue differentiation.
Findings
o-Ps lifetime is significantly longer in adipose tissue.
o-Ps lifetime measurement better separates tissue types than X-ray imaging.
Potential for implementation in PET scanners for tissue characterization.
Abstract
The objective of this work is to showcase the ortho-positronium lifetime as a probe for soft-tissue characterization. We employed positron annihilation lifetime spectroscopy to experimentally measure the three components of the positron annihilation lifetime para-positronium (p-Ps), positron, and ortho-positronium (o-Ps) for three types of porcine, non-fixated soft tissues ex vivo: adipose, hepatic, and muscle.Then, we benchmarked our measurements with X-ray phase-contrast imaging, which is the current state-of-the-art for soft-tissue analysis. We found that the o-Ps lifetime in adipose tissues (2.54+/-0.12) ns was approximately 20\% longer than in hepatic (2.04+/-0.09 ns) and muscle (2.03+/-0.12 ns) tissues .In addition, the separation between the measurements for adipose tissue and the other tissues was better from o-Ps lifetime measurement than from X-ray phase-contrast imaging. This…
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