Literature DB >> 29105173

Blechschmidt Collection: Revisiting specimens from a historical collection of serially sectioned human embryos and fetuses using modern imaging techniques.

Reina Miyazaki1, Haruyuki Makishima2, Jörg Männer3, Hans-Georg Sydow3, Chigako Uwabe2, Tetsuya Takakuwa1, Christoph Viebahn3, Shigehito Yamada1,2.   

Abstract

Along with the Carnegie Collection in the United States and the Kyoto Collection in Japan, the Blechschmidt Collection (Georg-August-University of Göttingen, Germany) is a major historical human embryo and fetus collection. These collections are of enormous value to human embryology; however, due to the nature of the historical histological specimens, some stains are fading in color, and some glass slides are deteriorating over time. To protect these specimens against such degradation and ensure their future usefulness, we tried to apply modern image scanning and computational reconstruction. Samples of histological specimens of the Blechschmidt Collection were digitized into images using commercial flatbed scanners with a resolution of 4800 pixels per inch. Two specimens were reconstructed into three-dimensional (3D) images by using modern techniques to vertically stack two-dimensional images of the slices into 3D blocks. The larger specimen of crown-rump length (CRL) 64.0 mm, a series of very large histological sections in human embryology, was reconstructed clearly, with its central nervous system segmented before stacking. The smaller specimen of CRL 17.5 mm was also reconstructed into 3D images. The outer surface of the embryo was intact, and its development was classified according to the widely used Carnegie stages (CSs). The CS of the specimen was identified as the later half of CS 20. The invaluable Blechschmidt Collection can be revisited for further research with modern techniques such as digital image scanning and computational 3D reconstruction.
© 2017 Japanese Teratology Society.

Entities:  

Keywords:  3D reconstruction; digitize; flatbed scanner; sliced specimen

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29105173     DOI: 10.1111/cga.12261

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Congenit Anom (Kyoto)        ISSN: 0914-3505            Impact factor:   1.409


  2 in total

1.  Three-Dimensional Analysis of Human Laryngeal and Tracheobronchial Cartilages during the Late Embryonic and Early Fetal Period.

Authors:  Yu Yamazaki; Toru Kanahashi; Shigehito Yamada; Jörg Männer; Tetsuya Takakuwa
Journal:  Cells Tissues Organs       Date:  2021-08-26       Impact factor: 2.481

2.  [Modelled Development. Practices of Human Embryology at Göttingen University in the Second Half of the Twentieth Century].

Authors:  Michael Markert
Journal:  NTM       Date:  2020-12
  2 in total

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