脑盒-一种促进脑磁共振成像特征与组织病理学相关的工具

Wolfgang Faigle, Marco Piccirelli, Tibor Hortobágyi, Karl Frontzek, Amelia Elaine Cannon, Wolfgang Emanuel Zürrer, Tobias Granberg, Zsolt Kulcsar, Thomas Ludersdorfer, Katrin B M Frauenknecht, Regina Reimann, Benjamin Victor Ineichen
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摘要

磁共振成像(MRI)在识别潜在的组织病理方面有局限性,这与多发性硬化症、中风或脑肿瘤等神经系统疾病有关。然而,没有标准化的方法将MRI特征与组织病理学相关联。因此,在这里,我们的目的是开发和验证一种工具,可以促进脑MRI特征与相应组织病理学的相关性。为此,我们设计了Brainbox,这是一个防水的、与mri兼容的3D打印容器,带有集成的3D坐标系统。我们使用Brainbox获取了8个新鲜和福尔马林固定的人类大脑的死后离体MRI,并使用内置的3D坐标系统将病灶成像特征与组织病理学相关联。凭借其内置的3D坐标系统,Brainbox允许将MRI特征与相应的组织基质相关联。Brainbox被用来将不同的MR图像特征与相应的组织基质相关联,包括正常的解剖结构,如海马或血管周围空间,以及腔隙性中风。固定后脑容量减少7% (p = 0.01)。Brainbox能够在扫描前对标本进行脱气,减少敏感性伪影,并最大限度地减少扫描过程中的体积运动。总之,我们的原理验证实验证明了Brainbox的可用性,这有助于提高MRI的特异性,并有助于标准化死后离体人脑MRI与组织病理学之间的相关性。我们的机构可以根据要求提供脑力集训。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Brainbox - a tool to facilitate correlation of brain magnetic resonance imaging features to histopathology
Abstract Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has limitations in identifying underlying tissue pathology, which is relevant for neurological diseases such as multiple sclerosis, stroke, or brain tumours. However, there are no standardized methods for correlating MRI features with histopathology. Thus, here we aimed to develop and validate a tool that can facilitate the correlation of brain MRI features to corresponding histopathology. For this, we designed the Brainbox, a waterproof and MRI-compatible 3D printed container with an integrated 3D coordinate system. We used the Brainbox to acquire post-mortem ex vivo MRI of eight human brains, fresh and formalin-fixed, and correlated focal imaging features to histopathology using the built-in 3D coordinate system. With its built-in 3D coordinate system, the Brainbox allowed correlation of MRI features to corresponding tissue substrates. The Brainbox was used to correlate different MR image features of interest to the respective tissue substrate, including normal anatomical structures such as the hippocampus or perivascular spaces, as well as a lacunar stroke. Brain volume decreased upon fixation by 7% (p = 0.01). The Brainbox enabled degassing of specimens prior to scanning, reducing susceptibility artifacts, and minimizing bulk motion during scanning. In conclusion, our proof-of-principle experiments demonstrate the usability of the Brainbox, which can contribute to improving the specificity of MRI and the standardization of the correlation between post-mortem ex vivo human brain MRI and histopathology. Brainboxes are available upon request from our institution.
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