C. and O. Vogt Institute for Brain Research, Medical Faculty, Heinrich-Heine-University Düsseldorf, Düsseldorf, Germany.
Institute of Neuroscience and Medicine (INM-1), Research Centre Jülich, Jülich, Germany.
NMR Biomed. 2019 Apr;32(4):e3779. doi: 10.1002/nbm.3779. Epub 2017 Aug 31.
Diffusion imaging has evolved considerably over the past decade. While it provides valuable information about the structural connectivity at the macro- and mesoscopic scale, bridging the gap to the microstructure at the level of single nerve fibers poses an enormous challenge. This is particularly true for the human brain with its large size, its large white-matter volume and availability of histological techniques for studying human whole-brain sections and subsequent 3D reconstruction. Classic post-mortem techniques for studying the fiber architecture of the brain, such as myeloarchitectonic staining or dye tracing, are complemented by novel histological approaches, such as 3D polarized light imaging or optical coherence tomography, enabling unique insight into the fiber architecture from large fiber bundles within deep white matter to single nerve fibers in the cortex. The present review discusses the benefits and challenges of these latest developments in comparison with the classic techniques, with particular focus on the mutual exchange between in vivo and post-mortem diffusion imaging and post-mortem microstructural approaches for understanding the wiring of the brain across different scales.
扩散成像在过去十年中得到了很大的发展。虽然它提供了关于宏观和介观尺度结构连接的有价值的信息,但要将其与单个神经纤维的微观结构联系起来,仍然是一个巨大的挑战。对于人类大脑来说,这一点尤其如此,因为它的体积庞大,白质体积大,并且有组织学技术可用于研究人类全脑切片和随后的 3D 重建。研究大脑纤维结构的经典死后技术,如髓鞘染色或染料示踪,与新的组织学方法相辅相成,如 3D 偏振光成像或光相干断层扫描,使我们能够从深部白质中的大纤维束到皮层中的单个神经纤维,对纤维结构有独特的了解。本综述讨论了与经典技术相比,这些最新发展的优势和挑战,特别关注了活体和死后扩散成像以及死后微观结构方法之间的相互交流,以了解不同尺度下大脑的布线。