Postmortem cryosectioning as an anatomic reference for human brain
mapping
Source: Computerized Medical Imaging and Graphics
1997 Apr;21(2):131-141.
Author: Toga AW, Goldkorn A, Ambach K, Chao K, Quinn BC, Yao P. PubMed ID: 9152579
Abstract:
This study examined the densitometric and topographic detail of
high resolution 3D digital postmortem cryosectioned brain images.
Anatomic image data and histology from cryosectioned human brain were
compared to in vivo MRI for the ability to delineate neuroanatomic
structure. 3D surface reconstructions in the Talairach and Tournoux
atlas ('Co-planar stereotaxic atlas of the human brain', Thieme, New
York, 1988) coordinate system enabled morphometric comparisons for a
representative sample of neuroanatomic structures. Spatial resolution of
cryosection images averaged 200 and 170 microns/pixel for whole head and
brain, respectively, and 40 microns/pixel for isolated the brain
regions. Anatomic detail was far superior to MRI, particularly in deep
subcortical regions such as the basal ganglia and in mesencephalic
nuclei and tracts. Digital repositioning in the Talairach coordinate
system enabled efficient structure localization and morphometric
comparison. Histology from collected tissue sections provided cytologic
detail that could be mapped to its approximate 3D context. This approach
permits comprehensive morphometric analyses necessary for an anatomic
framework to a digital atlas of the human brain