Langevin Helene M, Rizzo Donna M, Fox James R, Badger Gary J, Wu Junru, Konofagou Elisa E, Stevens-Tuttle Debbie, Bouffard Nicole A, Krag Martin H
Department of Neurology, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT, USA.
BMC Syst Biol. 2007 Jun 5;1:25. doi: 10.1186/1752-0509-1-25.
In humans, connective tissue forms a complex, interconnected network throughout the body that may have mechanosensory, regulatory and signaling functions. Understanding these potentially important phenomena requires non-invasive measurements of collagen network structure that can be performed in live animals or humans. The goal of this study was to show that ultrasound can be used to quantify dynamic changes in local connective tissue structure in vivo. We first performed combined ultrasound and histology examinations of the same tissue in two subjects undergoing surgery: in one subject, we examined the relationship of ultrasound to histological images in three dimensions; in the other, we examined the effect of a localized tissue perturbation using a previously developed robotic acupuncture needling technique. In ten additional non-surgical subjects, we quantified changes in tissue spatial organization over time during needle rotation vs. no rotation using ultrasound and semi-variogram analyses.
3-D renditions of ultrasound images showed longitudinal echogenic sheets that matched with collagenous sheets seen in histological preparations. Rank correlations between serial 2-D ultrasound and corresponding histology images resulted in high positive correlations for semi-variogram ranges computed parallel (r = 0.79, p < 0.001) and perpendicular (r = 0.63, p < 0.001) to the surface of the skin, indicating concordance in spatial structure between the two data sets. Needle rotation caused tissue displacement in the area surrounding the needle that was mapped spatially with ultrasound elastography and corresponded to collagen bundles winding around the needle on histological sections. In semi-variograms computed for each ultrasound frame, there was a greater change in the area under the semi-variogram curve across successive frames during needle rotation compared with no rotation. The direction of this change was heterogeneous across subjects. The frame-to-frame variability was 10-fold (p < 0.001) greater with rotation than with no rotation indicating changes in tissue structure during rotation.
The combination of ultrasound and semi-variogram analyses allows quantitative assessment of dynamic changes in the structure of human connective tissue in vivo.
在人体中,结缔组织在全身形成一个复杂的、相互连接的网络,可能具有机械传感、调节和信号传导功能。要理解这些潜在的重要现象,需要对胶原蛋白网络结构进行非侵入性测量,且这种测量可以在活体动物或人体中进行。本研究的目的是表明超声可用于量化体内局部结缔组织结构的动态变化。我们首先对两名接受手术的受试者的同一组织进行了超声和组织学联合检查:在一名受试者中,我们在三维空间中研究了超声与组织学图像的关系;在另一名受试者中,我们使用先前开发的机器人针刺技术研究了局部组织扰动的影响。在另外十名非手术受试者中,我们使用超声和半变异函数分析量化了针旋转与不旋转时组织空间组织随时间的变化。
超声图像的三维重建显示出纵向回声带,与组织学切片中所见的胶原带相匹配。二维超声序列图像与相应组织学图像之间的秩相关显示,与皮肤表面平行(r = 0.79,p < 0.001)和垂直(r = 0.63,p < 0.001)计算的半变异函数范围具有高度正相关,表明两个数据集在空间结构上具有一致性。针旋转导致针周围区域的组织位移,通过超声弹性成像进行空间映射,并且在组织学切片上对应于围绕针缠绕的胶原束。在为每个超声帧计算的半变异函数中,与不旋转相比,针旋转期间连续帧之间半变异函数曲线下的面积变化更大。这种变化的方向在不同受试者之间是异质的。旋转时帧间变异性比不旋转时大10倍(p < 0.001),表明旋转期间组织结构发生了变化。
超声和半变异函数分析相结合可对体内人体结缔组织结构的动态变化进行定量评估。