Paper
7 September 2006 Three-dimensional assessment of brain tissue morphology
Bert Müller, Marco Germann, Daniel Jeanmonod, Anne Morel
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Abstract
The microstructure of brain tissues becomes visible using different types of optical microscopy after the tissue sectioning. This preparation procedure introduces stress and strain in the anisotropic and inhomogeneous soft tissue slices, which are several 10 μm thick. Consequently, the three-dimensional dataset, generated out of the two-dimensional images with lateral submicrometer resolution, needs algorithms to correct the deformations, which can be significant for mellow tissue such as brain segments. The spatial resolution perpendicular to the slices is much worse with respect to the lateral sub-micrometer resolution. Therefore, we propose as complementary method the synchrotron-radiation-based micro computed tomography (SRμCT), which avoids any kind of preparation artifacts due to sectioning and histological processing and yields true micrometer resolution in the three orthogonal directions. The visualization of soft matter by the use of SRμCT, however, is often based on elaborate staining protocols, since the tissue exhibits (almost) the same x-ray absorption as the surrounding medium. Therefore, it is unexpected that human tissue from the pons and the medulla oblongata in phosphate buffer show several features such as the blood vessels and the inferior olivary nucleus without staining. The value of these tomograms lies especially in the precise non-rigid registration of the different sets of histological slices. Applications of this method to larger pieces of brain tissue, such as the human thalamus are planned in the context of stereotactic functional neurosurgery.
© (2006) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Bert Müller, Marco Germann, Daniel Jeanmonod, and Anne Morel "Three-dimensional assessment of brain tissue morphology", Proc. SPIE 6318, Developments in X-Ray Tomography V, 631803 (7 September 2006); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.680312
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Cited by 8 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Tissues

Brain

Blood vessels

Absorption

Spatial resolution

Tissue optics

X-rays

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