| Literature DB >> 30718645 |
Emrah Aydin1,2, Brittany Levy3, Marc Oria3, Hussam Nachabe3, Foong-Yen Lim3, Jose L Peiro3.
Abstract
Comparative, functional, developmental, and some morphological studies on animal anatomy require accurate visualization of three-dimensional structures. Nowadays, several widely applicable methods exist for non-destructive whole-mount imaging of animal tissues. The purpose of this study was to optimize specimen preparation and develop a method for quantitative analysis of the total pulmonary vasculature in fetal rats. Tissues were harvested at E21 and fetuses fixed overnight in 4% paraformaldehyde/phosphate buffered saline. They were treated with 25% Lugol solution for 72 hours to ensure perfusion. Four different methods were used for fetal specimen preparation; isolated lung, upper torso, direct right ventricle contrast injection, and whole body with partial thoracic skin excision. The microCT scan was performed, and pulmonary vasculature was segmented. Vessels were analyzed for diameter, length, and branching. Of the four preparation methods, only whole body with partial thoracic skin excision resulted in adequate reconstruction of the pulmonary vasculature. In silico generated 3D images gathered by micro CT showed pulmonary vasculature distributed throughout the lung, which was representative of the shape and structure of the lungs. The mean number of vessels segmented in the pulmonary tree was 900 ± 24 with a mean diameter of 134.13 µm (range 40.72-265.69 µm). While up to the 30th generation of vessels could be segmented, both for arteries and veins, the majority of branching was between the 21st and 30th generations. Passive diffusion of contrast material enables quantitative analysis of the fetal pulmonary vasculature. This technique is a useful tool to analyze the characteristics and quantify the fetal pulmonary vasculature.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30718645 PMCID: PMC6362188 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-37906-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Partially peeled skin of a rat fetus (arrow).
Figure 2Micro CT images of the fetuses. (A) Injection of the contrast directly into the right ventricle; (B) Upper half body of the fetus embedded into the Lugol solution; (C) Partial peeling of the skin embedded in Lugol solution.
Figure 3Three-dimensional images of the entire lung vasculature by micro CT scan after ex-vivo Lugol application on partially excised skin specimen on coronal and axial planes (A,B), Skeletonization of the entire lung vasculature (C), and colored image that allows the analysis of vasculature of a single lobe (D), Skeleton of one network of vessels in the right lobe (E) with mapping which helps measure all parameters of the vessels either selecting the vessel junctions (blue [mid-branches]and red [end branches]) or the vessels themselves (yellow and green) (F).
The morphometric results per vessel type.
| RPA | RPV | LPA | LPV | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Area of vessel (µm2) | 36.38 ± 28.86 | 52.46 ± 42.01 | 40.64 ± 28.03 | 47.01 ± 39.16 |
| Vessel length (µm) | 21.02 ± 14.31 | 20.64 ± 14.4 | 19.3 ± 13.04 | 22.26 ± 13.51 |
| Diameter of the vessel (µm) | 122.97 ± 46.07 | 145.78 ± 60.18 | 131.14 ± 45.46 | 137.68 ± 57.72 |
| Circumference of the vessel (µm) | 386.32 ± 144.75 | 457.98 ± 189.05 | 411.97 ± 142.82 | 432.53 ± 181.34 |
| L/D ratio | 0.20 ± 0.15 | 0.18 ± 0.14 | 0.18 ± 0.14 | 0.21 ± 0.16 |
(RPA: Right pulmonary artery, RPV: Right pulmonary vein, LPA: Left pulmonary artery, LPV: Left pulmonary vein, L/D ratio: Vessel length to diameter ratio.) (Values expressed as means ± standard deviations).
Figure 4The mean vessel number of each vessel type across generation groups. (RPA: Right pulmonary artery, RPV: Right pulmonary vein, LPA: Left pulmonary artery, LPV: Left pulmonary vein.).