Welcome to the LBNL LungLab Tour
- What is Lung Tour?
- LungTour is a set of images of the lung made with the Scanning Electron
Microscope and organized in hyperimage format to allow you to travel
through and see in more and more detail the structure of the lung. You
begin with a whole lung that has been opened to show the branching airway;
you can zoom in to the surface of this airway at different positions along
its length at higher and higher magnification.
- This image set is an experiment in hyperimage databasing, where images
are linked in a logical manner such that you can move through the set by
clicking on part of the image that you would like to see in more detail.
This brings you the next, higher magnification image in the series. At the
current time, Lung Tour is a partial demonstration: there are only thirty
or so images in the set so the hyperimage function will only work in one or
a few areas of a given picture.
- How to navigate the Lung Tour
- Begin by clicking on START TOUR at the bottom of the screen. The
first image is of one lobe of lung. Click anywhere on the image to rotate
and tilt the same view (alternately you can click on the button at the
lower right to see the next image in the series). Click again on the image
to display the airway unit that branches across the screen and down. You
can now choose to click at the bifurcation at the upper right and begin a
series of images of the cells there, or click further down on the right to
see the first alveoli as outpouchings of the airway and continue that
series. If you click in an area that is not linked nothing will happen. We
are working on displaying the areas that are linked but have not
implemented that yet. If this nascent hyperimage format is frustrating you
may navigate through the images by pressing the "Next Image" button at the
lower right.
- What is Lung Lab?
- LungLab is the Lung Microscopy Group, Children's Hospital Oakland
Research Institute, Oakland, California and the Life Sciences Division
and the National Center for Electron Microscopy of Lawrence Berkeley
National Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley, California.
- We are carrying out a number of basic, clinical, instrumentation, and
methodological experiments relevant to understanding the structure,
function, diseases, and treatment of diseases of the lung. We are
measuring the surface tension of the air-liquid interface along the airway
to understand how humans can normally breathe so efficiently. We are
studying surfactant to improve the treatment of premature babies whose
lives are threatened by the inability of their immature lungs to reduce
surface tension when they develop Respiratory Distress Syndrome. We are
looking at the effects of smoke on the surface liquid and surface tension
in the lung. We are developing new microscopical methods for studying the
lung including the water and liquid that part of the tissue. We are
developing techniques of measuring lung (and other) structures in three
dimensions that are quick, precise, and accurate. We are studying Cystic
Fibrosis, the serious disorder of salt and liquid in the body and lung.
For further information you may contact us at SJBastacky@LBL.gov.
- Current members, associates, and participating
organizations
START TOUR
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