| Literature DB >> 31488214 |
Whitney C McFadden1, Hadley Walsh2, Felix Richter3, Céline Soudant4, Clare H Bryce2, Patrick R Hof5,6, Mary Fowkes2, John F Crary2,5,6,7, Andrew T McKenzie8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Perfusing fixatives through the cerebrovascular system is the gold standard approach in animals to prepare brain tissue for spatial biomolecular profiling, circuit tracing, and ultrastructural studies such as connectomics. Translating these discoveries to humans requires examination of postmortem autopsy brain tissue. Yet banked brain tissue is routinely prepared using immersion fixation, which is a significant barrier to optimal preservation of tissue architecture. The challenges involved in adopting perfusion fixation in brain banks and the extent to which it improves histology quality are not well defined.Entities:
Keywords: Brain banking; Brain perfusion; Histology quality; Immersion fixation; Perfusion fixation
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31488214 PMCID: PMC6728946 DOI: 10.1186/s40478-019-0799-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol Commun ISSN: 2051-5960 Impact factor: 7.801
Fig. 1Study selection PRISMA flow diagram
General characteristics of included studies
| Study | Country | Study type | Approach | Number of perfusion-fixed brains |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adickes 1996 [ | United States | Histology | Ex situ, whole brain | NR |
| Adickes 1997 [ | United States | Histology | Ex situ, one hemisphere | 4 |
| Alvernia 2010 [ | France, United States | Surgical training | In situ, head separated | 20 |
| Beach 1987 [ | Canada, Japan | Histology | Ex situ, whole brain | 4 |
| Benet 2014 [ | United States | Surgical training | In situ, head separated | 12 |
| Böhm 1983 [ | Germany | Histology | In situ, thoracic dissection | > = 50 (histology for 12) |
| Coveñas 2003 [ | Spain | Histology | Ex situ, whole brain | 4 |
| de Oliveira 2012 [ | Brazil | Histology | Ex situ, one hemisphere | 14 |
| Donckaster 1963 [ | Chile, Uruguay | Histology | In situ, neck dissection | 103 |
| Feekes 2005 [ | United States | Gross anatomy | Unclear | 40 |
| Grinberg 2008 [ | Brazil | Histology | Ex situ, whole brain | 32 |
| Halliday 1988 [ | Australia | Histology | Ex situ, whole brain | 5 |
| Huang 1993 [ | Australia | Histology | Ex situ, whole brain | 5 |
| Insausti 1995 [ | Spain | Histology | Ex situ, whole brain | 12 |
| Istomin 1994 [ | Russia | Histology | Ex situ, whole brain; In situ, neck dissection | NR |
| Kalimo 1974 [ | United States | Histology | In situ, neck dissection | 5 |
| Latini 2015 [ | Sweden | Gross anatomy | In situ, neck dissection | 10 |
| Lin 2000 [ | Japan | Histology | Unclear | NR |
| Lyck 2008 [ | Denmark | Histology | In situ, unclear approach | 5 |
| Masawa 1993 [ | Japan | Histology | Ex situ, whole brain | 18 |
| Masawa 1994 [ | Japan | Histology | Ex situ, whole brain | 121 |
| McGeer 1988 [ | Canada | Histology | Ex situ, whole brain | NR |
| McKenzie 1994 [ | United States | Histology | In situ, neck dissection | 2 |
| Nakamura 1991 [ | Japan | Histology | Ex situ, whole brain | 4 |
| Pakkenberg 1966 [ | Denmark | Histology | In situ, unclear approach | 1 |
| Sharma 2006 [ | United Kingdom | Histology | Ex situ, whole brain | 36 |
| Shinkai 1976 [ | Japan | Histology | Ex situ, whole brain | 9 |
| Sutoo 1994 [ | Japan | Histology | Ex situ, whole brain | 2 |
| Suzuki 1979 [ | Japan | Histology | Ex situ, whole brain | 19 |
| Tanaka 1975 [ | United States | Histology | In situ, neck dissection | 1 |
| Torack 1990 [ | United States | Histology | Ex situ, whole brain | 4 |
| Turkoglu 2014 [ | United States | Surgical training | In situ, head separated | NR |
| von Keyserlingk 1984 [ | Germany | Histology | In situ, neck dissection | 4 |
| Waldvogel 2006 [ | New Zealand | Histology | Ex situ, whole brain; Ex situ, single hemisphere | NR |
| Welikovitch 2018 [ | Hungary, Canada | Histology | Ex situ, whole brain | 12 |
For study type, we categorized each study into one of three types (histology, gross anatomy, or surgical training) based on our interpretation of the primary use of the tissue by each the investigators. Note that “histology” as the primary goal for a study is defined to include neuropathologic examination, forensic examination, or to study biomolecular and morphologic mechanisms of human brain function and disease. NR: Not reported
Fig. 2Characteristics of human brain perfusion fixation methods employed over time. Studies that had unclear approaches or did not report the number of perfusion-fixed brains are not drawn in the figure. This chart was prepared using R (v. 3.5.1) and the ggplot2 package
Vascular access strategies reported by the included studies
| Study | Approach | Vessels Accessed | Cannula | Vessels Occluded |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adickes 1996 [ | Ex situ, both hemispheres | Unilateral vertebral artery, bilateral carotid arteries | 18G cannula | Contralateral vertebral artery |
| Adickes 1997 [ | Ex situ, one hemisphere | Internal carotid artery; if the PCoA was too small or not present, second cannula placed in the posterior cerebral artery | 18G plastic cannula | Basilar and contralateral cerebral arteries |
| Alvernia 2010 [ | In situ, head separated | Common carotid arteries, vertebral arteries, internal jugular veins | One-way urinary catheter (largest possible) | NR |
| Beach 1987 [ | Ex situ, whole brain | Bilateral internal carotid arteries, bilateral vertebral arteries or basilar artery | Plastic IV cannula | NR |
| Benet 2014 [ | In situ, head separated | Common carotid arteries, vertebral arteries, jugular veins | NR | NR |
| Böhm 1983 [ | In situ, thoracic dissection | Aortic arch | Wide balloon catheter | NR |
| Coveñas 2003 [ | Ex situ, whole brain | Carotid and vertebral arteries | NR | NR |
| de Oliveira 2012 [ | Ex situ, one hemisphere | Internal carotid artery, posterior communicating artery* | 20G peripheral catheter* | Basilar artery* and contralateral hemisphere arteries |
| Donckaster 1963 [ | In situ, neck dissection | Bilateral carotids, with or without vertebral arteries | Irrigation cannula | External carotids |
| Feekes 2005 [ | Unclear | Carotid artery | NR | NR |
| Grinberg 2008 [ | Ex situ, whole brain | Bilateral internal carotid arteries and vertebral arteries* | Olive C cannula* | NR |
| Halliday 1988 [ | Ex situ, whole brain | Carotid and vertebral arteries | NR | NR |
| Huang 1993 [ | Ex situ, whole brain | Bilateral internal carotid arteries and vertebral arteries | NR | NR |
| Insausti 1995 [ | Ex situ, whole brain | Both internal carotids, if both PCoAs were sufficient diameter; One carotid and the basilar artery otherwise | NR | Non-cannulated arteries were ligated |
| Istomin 1994 [ | Ex situ, whole brain | Internal carotid arteries and basilar arteries | NR | NR |
| Istomin 1994 [ | In situ, neck dissection | Bilateral carotid arteries | NR | NR |
| Kalimo 1974 [ | In situ, neck dissection | Initial segment of the right internal carotid artery | Glass cannula | Right external carotid, both left carotid arteries, and vertebral arteries |
| Latini 2015 [ | In situ, neck dissection | Left or right common carotid artery | NR | NR |
| Lyck 2008 [ | In situ, unclear approach | Internal carotid artery | NR | NR |
| Masawa 1993 [ | Ex situ, whole brain | Bilateral internal carotid arteries | NR | NR |
| Masawa 1994 [ | Ex situ, whole brain | Bilateral carotid arteries | NR | NR |
| McKenzie 1994 [ | In situ, neck dissection | Bilateral common carotid arteries | Polyethylene cannula (1/4″ outside diameter) | Vertebral arteries and internal jugular veins (intermittently clamped) |
| Nakamura 1991 [ | Ex situ, whole brain | Bilateral internal carotid and vertebral arteries | NR | NR |
| Pakkenberg 1966 [ | In situ, unclear approach | Unilateral carotid artery | NR | NR |
| Sharma 2006 [ | Ex situ, whole brain | Blood vessels at the base of the brain and floor of the third ventricle (non-vessel) | NR | NR |
| Shinkai 1976 [ | Ex situ, whole brain | Bilateral internal carotid and vertebral arteries | NR | NR |
| Sutoo 1994 [ | Ex situ, whole brain | Bilateral internal carotid arteries and basilar artery | NR | NR |
| Suzuki 1979 [ | Ex situ, whole brain | Bilateral middle cerebral arteries | NR | NR |
| Tanaka 1975 [ | In situ, neck dissection | Left internal carotid artery | NR | NR |
| Torack 1990 [ | Ex situ, whole brain | Bilateral internal carotid arteries and the basilar artery | NR | After initial perfusion fixation, clamped vessels to isolate the hippocampus |
| Turkoglu 2014 [ | In situ, head separated | Bilateral internal carotid arteries | One-way number 10 Foley urinary catheters | External carotid arteries |
| von Keyserlingk 1984 [ | In situ, neck dissection | Internal carotid artery, vertebral artery | NR | NR |
| Waldvogel 2006 [ | Ex situ, whole brain | Basilar and internal carotid arteries | 21G winged infusion needles | Leaking vessels occluded |
| Waldvogel 2006 [ | Ex situ, one hemisphere | Internal carotid, vertebral, and anterior cerebral arteries | 21G winged infusion needles | Leaking vessels occluded |
| Welikovitch 2018 [ | Ex situ, whole brain | Internal carotid and vertebral arteries | Serum 1 needle* | NR |
The overall approach to perfusion fixation, blood vessels cannulated, cannula type used, and any vessels reported as clamped or otherwise occluded by the included studies. If an included study did not describe the vessels that were accessed, it is not listed here. Asterisks indicate personal communications. NR: Not reported, PCoA: Posterior communicating artery
Washout solutions used by the included studies
| Study | Base solution | Additives | Drive method | Time | Amount | Rate | Pressure | Stopping criterion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alvernia 2010 [ | Warm tap water | NR | Syringe (60 ml) | NR | 2–4 l | NR | NR | Until water flow was clear (clot/debris removal) |
| Beach 1987 [ | Ice cold PBS | NR | Pump | 10–20 min | 1 l | 50–100 ml/min | NR | NR |
| Benet 2014 [ | Isotonic saline | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | “Low pressure” | Until contralateral outflow was clear |
| Böhm 1983 [ | Ringer solution in 0.2 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.5) | Rheomacrodex (Dextran 40) | Gravity | 5–10 min | 5 l | 500–1000 ml/min | NR | Until blood and blood clots were washed away |
| Coveñas 2003 [ | 0.15 M PBS (pH 7.2) | NR | Pump | NR | 1 l | NR | NR | NR |
| de Oliveira 2012 [ | Mannitol | Warm heparin | Gravity | NR | 250 ml | NR | NR | NR |
| Donckaster 1963 [ | Physiological saline | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| Grinberg 2008 [ | NaCl 0.9% | NR | Gravity* | NR | NR | NR | 147.4 mmHg (height of 2 m*) | NR |
| Grinberg 2008 [ | 20% Mannitol | Heparin | Gravity* | NR | 250 ml | NR | 147.4 mmHg | NR |
| Halliday 1988 [ | 0.1 M Sodium phoshate (pH 7.4) | 1% sodium nitrite | Pump | NR | 5 l | NR | “Normal mean arterial pressure” | NR |
| Huang 1993 [ | PBS | NR | NR | 33 mins | 4 l | 120 ml/min | NR | NR |
| Insausti 1995 [ | Saline at 4 °C | Heparin, 10,000 units | NR | 20 mins | 2 l | 100 ml/min | NR | NR |
| Istomin 1994 [ | Saline | NR | Gravity or Syringe | NR | NR | NR | 150 mmHg | Clear fluid flow from the veins |
| Kalimo 1974 [ | NaCl 0.9% | NR | Gravity | <= 5 mins | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| Lin 2000 [ | 0.01 M PBS (pH 7.4) | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| Nakamura 1991 [ | 0.01 M sodium-PBS (pH 7.4) | NR | Pump | NR | 1 l | NR | NR | NR |
| Sutoo 1994 [ | Ice cold PBS (pH 7.4) | NR | NR | NR | 2 l | NR | NR | NR |
| Torack 1990 [ | PBS | NR | NR | NR | 180 ml (60 ml in each vessel) | NR | NR | NR |
| Turkoglu 2014 [ | Saline | NR | Gravity | NR | 3 l | NR | 110 mmHg (height of 1.5 m) | Until no visible blood or clots drained from the IJVs |
| Waldvogel 2006 [ | PBS (pH 7.4) | 1% sodium nitrite | Pump | 15 mins | 0.5 l | ~ 33 ml/min | NR | 15 min or until the brain is cleared of blood |
| Welikovitch 2018 [ | Physiological saline | 0.33% heparin | Gravity | 30 mins | 1.5 l | 50 ml/min | NR | NR |
If the study is not listed here, then it did not report the use of a washout solution. If gravity was used to drive perfusate, we used the formula P = ρgh, where P = hydrostatic pressure, ρ = density of substance (assumed equal to water), g = gravitational acceleration, and h = height, to calculate the pressure. Asterisks indicate personal communications. NR: Not reported, PBS: Phosphate-buffered saline, IJV: Internal jugular vein
Fixative solutions reported by the included studies
| Study | Fixative solution | Buffer | Drive | Time | Amount | Flow rate | Pressure |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adickes 1996 [ | 10% buffered formalin | NR | Gravity | 15–20 min | 2 l | 100–133 ml/min | 75.6 mmHg (height of 1 m) |
| Adickes 1997 [ | 10% buffered formalin | Phosphate | Gravity | 15–20 min | 2 l | 100–133 ml/min | 75.6 mmHg (height of 1 m) |
| Alvernia 2010 [ | Formaldehyde 37% and ethyl alcohol 10% | NR | Syringe (60 ml) | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| Beach 1987 [ | 4% paraformaldehyde (ice cold) | 0.1 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) | Pump | 40–80 min | 4 l | 50–100 ml/min | NR |
| Benet 2014 [ | 10% formaldehyde | NR | NR | NR | 0.7 l | NR | NR |
| Benet 2014 [ | Custom solution: ethanol 62.4%, glycerol 17%, phenol 10.2%, formaldehyde 2.3%, and water 8.1% | NR | NR | NR | 0.7 l | NR | NR |
| Böhm 1983 [ | 2% glutaraldehyde | 0.2 M phosphate buffer | Gravity | 5–10 min | 5–10 l | ~ 1000 ml/min | 25.7–47.8 mmHg |
| Coveñas 2003 [ | 4% paraformaldehyde | 0.15 M PBS (pH 7.2) | NR | NR | 3 l | NR | “Normal mean arterial pressure” |
| de Oliveira 2012 [ | 20% formalin | NR | Gravity | NR | 5 Ll | NR | NR |
| Donckaster 1963 [ | Cajal fixative: formalin and ammonium bromide | NR | NR | NR | 900 ml (300 ml in children < 12 years old) | NR | < 200 mmHg |
| Feekes 2005 [ | 10% formalin | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| Feekes 2005 [ | 2.5% formaldehyde, 6% isopropyl alcohol, 1% glycerin | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| Grinberg 2008 [ | 10% formalin | None | Gravity | NR | 5 l | NR | 147.4 mmHg (height of 2 m*) |
| Grinberg 2008 [ | 20% formalin | None | Gravity | NR | 5 l | NR | 147.4 mmHg |
| Grinberg 2008 [ | 70% ethanol | None | Gravity | NR | 5 l | NR | 147.4 mmHg |
| Grinberg 2008 [ | Acetic acid-alcohol-formalin | None | Gravity | NR | 5 l | NR | 147.4 mmHg |
| Halliday 1988 [ | 4% formaldehyde, 2% picric acid; followed by 10% sucrose in fixative | 0.1 M sodium phosphate | Pump | NR | 10 l fixative only; 4 l 10% sucrose in fixative | NR | “Normal mean arterial pressure” |
| Huang 1993 [ | 4% paraformaldehyde | 0.1 M phosphate buffer | NR | 83 mins | 10 l | 120 ml/min | NR |
| Insausti 1995 [ | 4% paraformaldehyde (4 °C) or 4% paraformaldehyde, 0.02% picric acid (4 °C) | NR | NR | 120 mins | 4 l or 8 l | 33 or 67 ml/min | NR |
| Istomin 1994 [ | 10–12% formalin | Neutral buffered | Syringe or Gravity | NR | NR | NR | 150 mmHg |
| Kalimo 1974 [ | 1.0% paraformaldehyde, 2.0% glutaraldehyde (37 °C) | 0.1 M cacodylate (pH 7.4) | Gravity | NR | 1.5 l (adult), 0.7 l (newborn) | NR | 132 mmHg |
| Latini 2015 [ | 12% formalin | NR | Infusion device (compressed air mechanism)* | 15–20 min | 2 l | 100–133 ml/min | 1500 mmHg (200 kPa) |
| Lin 2000 [ | 4% paraformaldehyde, 0.2% picric acid, and 0.1% glutaraldehyde | 0.1 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| Lyck 2008 [ | 4% formalin | 75 mM phosphate buffer (pH 7.0) | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| Masawa 1993 [ | 4% formalin, 1% glutaraldehyde | 0.1 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) | NR | NR | 400 ml | NR | 100 mmHg |
| Masawa 1994 [ | 10% buffered formalin | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | 100 mmHg |
| McGeer 1988 [ | 4% paraformaldehyde, 0.1% glutaraldehyde | 0.1% phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| McKenzie 1994 [ | 10% formalin | Neutral buffered | Gravity | 60 mins | 12–14 l | 200–233 ml/min | 75.6 mmHg (height of 1 m) |
| Nakamura 1991 [ | 4% paraformaldehyde, 0.1% glutaraldehyde (ice cold) | 0.1 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) | Pump | 15 mins | 1 l | 70–80 ml/min | NR |
| Pakkenberg 1966 [ | Alcohol 80% 9 parts, formalin 4% 1 part | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| Sharma 2006 [ | 20% formalin | Neutral buffered | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| Shinkai 1976 [ | 2.5% glutaraldehyde containing 0.2 M sucrose | 0.1 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| Sutoo 1994 [ | 4% paraformaldehyde, 0.2% glutaraldehyde | PBS | NR | 90 mins | 6 l | 67 ml/min | NR |
| Suzuki 1979 [ | 2.5% glutaraldehyde | Phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) | NR | 5–10 min | NR | NR | NR |
| Tanaka 1975 [ | 2% glutaraldehyde, 1% paraformaldehyde (pH 7.2) | 0.1 M sodium cacodylate | NR | NR | 0.7 l | NR | NR |
| Torack 1990 [ | 4% paraformaldehyde (4 °C) | 0.1 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) | NR | 30 mins | 1.68 l (560 ml in each artery) | 50 ml/min | “40 lbs. of pressure” |
| Turkoglu 2014 [ | 10% formaldehyde | NR | Gravity | 60 mins | NR | NR | 110.4 mmHg (height of 1.5 m) |
| von Keyserlingk 1984 [ | 1% paraformaldehyde, 1% glutaraldehyde, 1.65% potassium dichromate | 0.1 M cacodylate buffer (pH 7.4) | NR | NR | 5 l | NR | NR |
| Waldvogel 2006 [ | 15% formalin | 0.1 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) | Pump | 30–45 min | 2 l | ~ 33 ml/min | NR |
| Welikovitch 2018 [ | 4% paraformaldehyde, 0.05% glutaraldehyde, and 0.2% picric acid | 0.1 M phosphate buffer | Gravity* | 90–120 min | 4–5 l | 33–56 ml/min | NR |
This table lists the fixatives solutions and their buffers, amounts, times for perfusion, flow rates, methods for driving perfusate, and/or perfusion pressures that are reported by the included studies. If gravity was used to drive perfusate, we used the formula P = ρgh, where P = hydrostatic pressure, ρ = density of substance (assumed equal to water), g = gravitational acceleration, and h = height, to calculate the pressure. Asterisks indicate personal communications. NR: Not reported, PBS: Phosphate-buffered saline
Postfixation procedures reported by the included studies
| Study | Pre-processing | Fixative | Buffer | Temp | Length of postfixation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adickes 1996 [ | NR | 10% buffered formalin | Phosphate | NR | 1 day (if postfixed)a |
| Adickes 1997 [ | Cut into 1–1.5 cm-thick sections | 10% buffered formalin | Phosphate | NR | 5–6 h |
| von Keyserlingk 1984 [ | Brain left in skull for 2 h, then removed and dissected | 1% osmium tetroxide | 0.1 M sodium cacodylate | NR | 2 h |
| Istomin 1994 [ | NR | 10–12% formalin | Neutral-buffered | NR | NR |
| Beach 1987 [ | NR | 4% paraformaldehyde | 0.1 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) | 4 °C | NR |
| Benet 2014 [ | NR | 1:10 dilution of 10% formaldehyde | NR | 5 °C | > = 2 days |
| Benet 2014 [ | NR | 1:10 dilution of 10% custom solution (ethanol 62.4%, glycerol 17%, phenol 10.2%, formaldehyde 2.3%, and water 8.1%) | NR | 5 °C | > = 2 days |
| Böhm 1983 [ | Cut into 1 cm-thick coronal sections | Paraformaldehyde or formalin | 0.1 M phosphate buffer | NR | NR |
| Coveñas 2003 [ | NR | 4% paraformaldehyde | 0.15 M PBS (pH 7.2) | 4 °C | 30 days |
| de Oliveira 2012 [ | NR | 20% formalin | NR | NR | 3 weeks |
| Donckaster 1963 [ | Brain removed | Cajal fixative: formalin and ammonium bromide | NR | NR | 4 days |
| Grinberg 2008 [ | NR | Same fixative as was used for fixation | NR | NR | NR |
| Huang 1993 [ | Dissection of brainstem | NR | NR | NR | <= 24 h |
| Insausti 1995 [ | Dissected into slabs approximately 1 cm thick | 4% paraformaldehyde | NR | NR | 48–72 h |
| Kalimo 1974 [ | Brain left in the skull for 1 to 2 h after perfusion fixation, then removed, then samples dissected for EM | 1.0% paraformaldehyde, 2.0% glutaraldehyde | 0.1 M cacodylate (pH 7.4) | NR | Overnight |
| Kalimo 1974 [ | Same as above | 10% formaldehyde | NR | NR | 10 days |
| Latini 2015 [ | Brain extracted from the skull 48 h after perfusion | 10% formalin | NR | NR | 24 h |
| Lin 2000 [ | NR | 4% paraformaldehyde | 0.1 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) | 4 °C | Overnight |
| Lyck 2008 [ | Brain removed from skull | 4% paraformaldehyde | 0.15 M Sørensens phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) | 4 °C | 2 weeks |
| Masawa 1993 [ | NR | 4% formalin | 0.1 M phosphate buffer | NR | > = 3 days |
| Masawa 1993 [ | From postfixed tissue, tissue blocks were cut and buffer washed | 1% osmium tetroxide solution | NR | 4 °C | 90 min |
| McGeer 1988 [ | NR | 4% paraformaldehyde | NR | NR | 2–3 days or until the pink color of unfixed erythrocytes was gone |
| McKenzie 1994 [ | Waited 1 h after perfusion fixation, then the skull was opened, and the brain was removed | Formalin | Neutral-buffered | 4 °C | NR |
| Pakkenberg 1966 [ | Brain removed from skull | Alcohol 80% 9 parts, formalin 4% 1 part | NR | NR | 3 weeks |
| Sharma 2006 [ | Brain suspended in a bucket | 20% formalin | Neutral-buffered | NR | 1–4 days |
| Shinkai 1976 [ | Cut into 2 mm-thick tissue blocks | 2.5% glutaraldehyde containing 0.2 M sucrose | NR | NR | 4–8 h |
| Sutoo 1994 [ | Brain halved sagittally and sliced into 10 mm coronal blocks | 4% paraformaldehyde | PBS | 4 °C | 2 days |
| Suzuki 1979 [ | Dissected bifurcations of the first temporal branches of the middle cerebral arteries | 2.5% glutaraldehyde | NR | NR | 4 h |
| Tanaka 1975 [ | Samples taken from various regions of the brain | 1.0% osmium tetroxide | NR | NR | NR |
| Tanaka 1975 [ | Rest of the brain | 8.0% formaldehyde | NR | NR | NR |
| Torack 1990 [ | Hippocampus and entorhinal cortex was isolated and sectioned into 0.5 cm thick slices | 4% paraformaldehyde +/− 1% Bouin’s solution (picric acid, acetic acid, and formaldehyde) | NR | NR | 48 h |
| Turkoglu 2014 [ | Brain removed from skull | 10% formaldehyde | NR | NR | 2 weeks |
| Waldvogel 2006 [ | NR | 15% formalin | 0.1 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) | NR | 6–12 h |
| Welikovitch 2018 [ | Dissected out the medial temporal lobe | 4% paraformaldehyde and 0.2% picric acid | 0.1 M phosphate buffer | NR | Overnight |
a: Note that in Adickes et al. (1996), the brain is either cut immediately or postfixed in formalin for one day. NR: Not reported, PBS: Phosphate-buffered saline
Strategies for long-term storage of perfusion-fixed brain tissue
| Study | Overall method | Study type | Tissue | Preservative agent(s) | Temperature | Storage duration |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alvernia 2010 [ | Immersion in fixative | Surgical training | Separated head | 10% Formalin and 10% ethyl alcohol | 4 °C | Up to 4 years |
| Benet 2014 [ | Immersion in fixative | Surgical training | Separated head | 10% formaldehyde or 10% custom solution (ethanol 62.4%, glycerol 17%, phenol 10.2%, formaldehyde 2.3%, and water 8.1%) | 5 °C | Up to a year |
| Insausti 1995 [ | Cryoprotection and freezing | Histology | 1 cm-thick coronal tissue blocks | Solutions of 10 and 20% glycerol in 0.1 M phosphate buffer and 2% dimethylsulfoxide | −80 °C | NR |
| Lyck 2008 [ | Immersion in fixative | Histology | Whole brain | 0.1% paraformaldehyde in 0.15 M Sørensens phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) | 4 °C | Up to 4 years |
| Sutoo 1994 [ | Cryoprotection and freezing | Histology | 1 cm-thick coronal tissue blocks | Buffered 5% sucrose | −80 °C | NR |
| Waldgovel 2006 [ | Cryoprotection and freezing | Histology | Tissue blocks (many 1 cm-thick) | 20–30% sucrose in 0.1 M phosphate buffer with 0.1% sodium azide | −80 °C | NR |
| Welikovitch 2018 [ | Cryoprotection and freezing | Histology | Brain sections | 1.1 M sucrose, 37.5% ethylene glycol in PBS | −20 °C | NR |
If a study did not report the use of a long-term storage method, then it is not included in this table. NR: Not reported, PBS: Phosphate-buffered saline
Description of studies with an explicit comparison between perfusion and immersion fixation
| Study | Design | Number of brains fixed | Time for procedure | Outcome | Result | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Perfusion | Immersion | Perfusion | Immersion | ||||
| Adickes 1997 [ | Crossover, within-brain | 4 | 4 | 5–6 h | 2 weeks | Subjective histology quality | Equal or superior tissue preservation with perfusion fixation compared with immersion fixation |
| Beach 1987 [ | Experimental, non-randomized | 2 | 2 | 1–8 days | 1–8 days | Subjective histology quality | More even distribution of staining in perfusion-fixed samples, while immersion fixed samples had a dense band of staining at the edges of the fixed tissue and pale regions in the interior |
| Grinberg 2008 [ | Experimental, non-randomized | 32 | 4 | Not reported | > 3 months | Subjective histology quality | More uniform penetration of fixative agent into all regions of the brain in perfusion-fixed samples, including deep regions such as the thalamus and basal ganglia |
| Lyck 2008 [ | Experimental, non-randomized | 32 | 5 | 1 day - 4 years | 1 day - 10 years | Long-term immunostaining | Better preservation of sensitive antigens (e.g., NeuN and CNPase) in perfusion-fixed specimens |
| Sharma 2006 [ | Experimental, randomized selection of brain tissue | 36 | 36 | 1–4 days | 3–4 weeks | Subjective histology quality | No significant difference in staining quality between perfusion and immersion fixation |
Note that “histology quality” refers to visual microscopy results, including slides that have been stained with dyes as well as with antibody staining. Regarding the time for the procedure, note that in Beach et al. [7], the tissue was sliced into 1 cm-thick blocks prior to the postfixation or initial immersion fixation. In Lyck et al. [58], the time reported includes the time for long-term storage in fixative beyond the initial fixation procedure
Fig. 3Risk of bias assessment for the studies comparing perfusion to immersion fixation. We used a modified version of the Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) questionnaire for non-randomized experimental studies
Summary of findings for the two outcomes from comparing perfusion fixation and immersion fixation identified in our review
| Outcome | Number of studies | Number of brain samples | Overall effect | Quality of the evidence (GRADE) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subjective histology quality | 4 (1 randomized, 1 crossover) | 116 | Equal or superior histology quality in perfusion-fixed tissues when compared to immersion fixation of relatively large volumes of brain tissue | ⨁⨁⨁⨀ MODERATE |
| Long-term immunostaining quality | 1 | 37 | Slower long-term degradation of antigen staining quality for sensitive antigens in perfusion-fixed tissue | ⨁⨀⨀⨀ VERY LOW |
In the GRADE quality assessment system, there are four levels of quality: high, moderate, low, and very low