Eaton-Peabody Laboratories, Massachusetts Eye and Ear, Boston, Massachusetts.
Department of Otolaryngology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
Laryngoscope. 2020 Feb;130(2):487-495. doi: 10.1002/lary.27991. Epub 2019 Apr 8.
OBJECTIVES/HYPOTHESIS: Histopathological analysis of hair cell survival in human temporal bone sections has historically been binarized such that each hair cell row is rated as either present or absent, thereby greatly underestimating the amount of hair cell loss. Here, we describe and validate a technique to reliably assess fractional hair cell survival in archival sections stained with hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) using high-resolution light microscopy and optical sectioning.
Technique validation.
Hair cell counts in archival temporal bone slide sets were performed by several observers using either differential interference contrast (DIC) or confocal microscopy of the endogenous eosin fluorescence in hair cells. As a further cross-check, additional decelloidinized sections were immunostained with hair cell markers myosin VI and VIIa.
Cuticular plates and stereocilia bundles are routinely resolvable in DIC imaging of archival H&E-stained human material using standard research-grade microscopes, allowing highly accurate counts of fractional hair cell survival that are reproducible across observer and can be verified by confocal microscopy.
Reanalysis of cases from the classic temporal bone literature on presbycusis suggests that, contrary to prior reports, differences in audiometric patterns may be well explained by the patterns of hair cell loss.
NA Laryngoscope, 130:487-495, 2020.
目的/假设:历史上,对人颞骨切片中毛细胞存活的组织病理学分析一直是二值化的,即每个毛细胞行要么存在要么不存在,从而大大低估了毛细胞损失的数量。在这里,我们描述并验证了一种使用高分辨率光学显微镜和光学切片可靠评估存档 H&E 染色切片中毛细胞分数存活的技术。
技术验证。
使用相差显微镜或毛细胞内源性曙红荧光的共聚焦显微镜,由几位观察者对存档颞骨幻灯片集进行毛细胞计数。作为进一步的交叉检查,用毛细胞标志物肌球蛋白 VI 和 VIIa 对额外的脱细胞素化切片进行免疫染色。
在使用标准研究级显微镜对存档 H&E 染色的人组织进行相差成像时,常规上可分辨出表皮板和纤毛束,从而能够对毛细胞分数存活进行高度准确的计数,这种计数在观察者之间具有可重复性,并可通过共聚焦显微镜进行验证。
对老年性聋经典颞骨文献中病例的重新分析表明,与先前的报告相反,听力模式的差异可能很好地解释了毛细胞损失的模式。
无。喉科学,130:487-495, 2020.