์ฝ˜ํ…์ธ ๋กœ ๊ฑด๋„ˆ๋›ฐ๊ธฐ
Merck

Magnetic resonance microscopy and correlative histopathology of the infarcted heart.

Scientific reports (2019-12-29)
Itziar Perez-Terol, Cesar Rios-Navarro, Elena de Dios, Jose M Morales, Jose Gavara, Nerea Perez-Sole, Ana Diaz, Gema Minana, Remedios Segura-Sabater, Clara Bonanad, Antoni Bayรฉs-Genis, Oliver Husser, Jose V Monmeneu, Maria P Lopez-Lereu, Julio Nunez, Francisco J Chorro, Amparo Ruiz-Sauri, Vicente Bodi, Daniel Monleon
์ดˆ๋ก

Delayed enhancement cardiovascular magnetic resonance (MR) is the gold-standard for non-invasive assessment after myocardial infarction (MI). MR microscopy (MRM) provides a level of detail comparable to the macro objective of light microscopy. We used MRM and correlative histopathology to identify infarct and remote tissue in contrast agent-free multi-sequence MRM in swine MI hearts. One control group (nโ€‰=โ€‰3 swine) and two experimental MI groups were formed: 90โ€‰min of ischemia followed by 1 week (acute MIโ€‰=โ€‰6 swine) or 1 month (chronic MIโ€‰=โ€‰5 swine) reperfusion. Representative samples of each heart were analysed by contrast agent-free multi-sequence (T1-weighting, T2-weighting, T2*-weighting, T2-mapping, and T2*-mapping). MRM was performed in a 14-Tesla vertical axis imager (Bruker-AVANCE 600 system). Images from MRM and the corresponding histopathological stained samples revealed differences in signal intensities between infarct and remote areas in both MI groups (p-valueโ€‰<โ€‰0.001). The multivariable models allowed us to precisely classify regions of interest (acute MI: specificity 92% and sensitivity 80%; chronic MI: specificity 100% and sensitivity 98%). Probabilistic maps based on MRM images clearly delineated the infarcted regions. As a proof of concept, these results illustrate the potential of MRM with correlative histopathology as a platform for exploring novel contrast agent-free MR biomarkers after MI.

MATERIALS
์ œํ’ˆ ๋ฒˆํ˜ธ
๋ธŒ๋žœ๋“œ
์ œํ’ˆ ์„ค๋ช…

Millipore
2,3,5-Triphenyl-tetrazolium chloride solution, suitable for microbiology, Filter sterilized solution that is recommended for the detection of microbial growth based on reduction of TTC