4 research outputs found

    Serial sectioning block-face imaging of post-mortem human brain

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    No current imaging technology can directly and without significant distortion visualize the defining microscopic features of the human brain. Ex vivo histological techniques yield exquisite planar images, but the cutting, mounting and staining they require induce slice-specific distortions, introducing cross-slice differences that prohibit true 3D analysis. Clearing techniques have proven difficult to apply to large blocks of human tissue and cause dramatic distortions as well. Thus, we have only a poor understanding of human brain structures that occur at a scale of 1–100 μm, in which neurons are organized into functional cohorts. To date, mesoscopic features which are critical components of this spatial context, have only been quantified in studies of 2D histologic images acquired in a small number of subjects and/or over a small region of the brain, typically in the coronal orientation, implying that features that are oblique or orthogonal to the coronal plane are difficult to properly analyze. A serial sectioning optical coherence tomography (OCT) imaging infrastructure will be developed and utilized to obtain images of cyto- and myelo-architectural features and microvasculature network of post-mortem human brain tissue. Our imaging infrastructure integrates vibratome with imaging head along with pre and post processing algorithms to construct volumetric OCT images of cubic centimeters of brain tissue blocks. Imaging is performed on tissue block-face prior to sectioning, which preserves the 3D information. Serial sections cut from the block can be subsequently treated with multiplexed histological staining of multiple molecular markers that will facilitate cellular classification or imaged with high-resolution transmission birefringence microscope. The successful completion of this imaging infrastructure enables the automated reconstruction of undistorted volume of human tissue brain blocks and permits studying the pathological alternations arising from diseases. Specifically, the mesoscopic and microscopic pathological alternations, as well as the optical properties and cortical morphological alternations of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortical region of two difference neurodegeneration diseases, Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE) and Alzheimer’s Disease (AD), were evaluated using this imaging infrastructure

    Anisotropy Across Fields and Scales

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    This open access book focuses on processing, modeling, and visualization of anisotropy information, which are often addressed by employing sophisticated mathematical constructs such as tensors and other higher-order descriptors. It also discusses adaptations of such constructs to problems encountered in seemingly dissimilar areas of medical imaging, physical sciences, and engineering. Featuring original research contributions as well as insightful reviews for scientists interested in handling anisotropy information, it covers topics such as pertinent geometric and algebraic properties of tensors and tensor fields, challenges faced in processing and visualizing different types of data, statistical techniques for data processing, and specific applications like mapping white-matter fiber tracts in the brain. The book helps readers grasp the current challenges in the field and provides information on the techniques devised to address them. Further, it facilitates the transfer of knowledge between different disciplines in order to advance the research frontiers in these areas. This multidisciplinary book presents, in part, the outcomes of the seventh in a series of Dagstuhl seminars devoted to visualization and processing of tensor fields and higher-order descriptors, which was held in Dagstuhl, Germany, on October 28–November 2, 2018

    Anisotropy Across Fields and Scales

    Get PDF
    This open access book focuses on processing, modeling, and visualization of anisotropy information, which are often addressed by employing sophisticated mathematical constructs such as tensors and other higher-order descriptors. It also discusses adaptations of such constructs to problems encountered in seemingly dissimilar areas of medical imaging, physical sciences, and engineering. Featuring original research contributions as well as insightful reviews for scientists interested in handling anisotropy information, it covers topics such as pertinent geometric and algebraic properties of tensors and tensor fields, challenges faced in processing and visualizing different types of data, statistical techniques for data processing, and specific applications like mapping white-matter fiber tracts in the brain. The book helps readers grasp the current challenges in the field and provides information on the techniques devised to address them. Further, it facilitates the transfer of knowledge between different disciplines in order to advance the research frontiers in these areas. This multidisciplinary book presents, in part, the outcomes of the seventh in a series of Dagstuhl seminars devoted to visualization and processing of tensor fields and higher-order descriptors, which was held in Dagstuhl, Germany, on October 28–November 2, 2018
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