Grinberg Lea T, Amaro Edson, Teipel Stefan, dos Santos Denis Dionizio, Pasqualucci Carlos Augusto, Leite Renata E P, Camargo Celia Regina, Gonçalves Jaqueline Alba, Sanches Ariadne Gonçalves, Santana Miriam, Ferretti Renata E L, Jacob-Filho Wilson, Nitrini Ricardo, Heinsen Helmut
Department of Pathology, University of São Paulo Medical School, São Paulo, Brazil.
Cell Tissue Bank. 2008 Sep;9(3):195-203. doi: 10.1007/s10561-008-9080-5. Epub 2008 Jun 12.
In spite of considerable technical advance in MRI techniques, the optical resolution of these methods are still limited. Consequently, the delineation of cytoarchitectonic fields based on probabilistic maps and brain volume changes, as well as small-scale changes seen in MRI scans need to be verified by neuronanatomical/neuropathological diagnostic tools. To attend the current interdisciplinary needs of the scientific community, brain banks have to broaden their scope in order to provide high quality tissue suitable for neuroimaging- neuropathology/anatomy correlation studies. The Brain Bank of the Brazilian Aging Brain Research Group (BBBABSG) of the University of Sao Paulo Medical School (USPMS) collaborates with researchers interested in neuroimaging-neuropathological correlation studies providing brains submitted to postmortem MRI in-situ. In this paper we describe and discuss the parameters established by the BBBABSG to select and to handle brains for fine-scale neuroimaging-neuropathological correlation studies, and to exclude inappropriate/unsuitable autopsy brains. We tried to assess the impact of the postmortem time and storage of the corpse on the quality of the MRI scans and to establish fixation protocols that are the most appropriate to these correlation studies. After investigation of a total of 36 brains, postmortem interval and low body temperature proved to be the main factors determining the quality of routine MRI protocols. Perfusion fixation of the brains after autopsy by mannitol 20% followed by formalin 20% was the best method for preserving the original brain shape and volume, and for allowing further routine and immunohistochemical staining. Taken to together, these parameters offer a methodological progress in screening and processing of human postmortem tissue in order to guarantee high quality material for unbiased correlation studies and to avoid expenditures by post-imaging analyses and histological processing of brain tissue.
尽管MRI技术取得了显著的技术进步,但这些方法的光学分辨率仍然有限。因此,基于概率图谱和脑容量变化以及MRI扫描中所见的小规模变化来描绘细胞构筑区域,需要通过神经解剖学/神经病理学诊断工具进行验证。为了满足科学界当前的跨学科需求,脑库必须扩大其范围,以提供适合神经影像学-神经病理学/解剖学相关性研究的高质量组织。圣保罗大学医学院(USPMS)的巴西衰老脑研究组脑库(BBBABSG)与对神经影像学-神经病理学相关性研究感兴趣的研究人员合作,提供在原位进行死后MRI检查的大脑。在本文中,我们描述并讨论了BBBABSG为选择和处理大脑以进行精细尺度的神经影像学-神经病理学相关性研究以及排除不合适/不适合的尸检大脑而制定的参数。我们试图评估死后时间和尸体储存对MRI扫描质量的影响,并建立最适合这些相关性研究的固定方案。在对总共36个大脑进行研究后,死后间隔和低体温被证明是决定常规MRI方案质量的主要因素。尸检后先用20%甘露醇灌注固定大脑,然后用20%福尔马林固定,这是保存原始脑形状和体积并允许进一步进行常规和免疫组织化学染色的最佳方法。综上所述,这些参数在人类尸检组织的筛选和处理方面提供了方法上的进步,以保证用于无偏相关性研究的高质量材料,并避免脑组织的成像后分析和组织学处理的费用。