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NOVIDADES
Tissue sectioning is a routine procedure in hospitals, for instance to investigate tumors. As the name implies, it entails cutting samples of body tissue into thin slices, then staining them and examining them under a microscope. Medical professionals have long dreamt of the possibility of examining the entire, three-dimensional tissue sample and not just the individual slices. The most obvious way forward here lies in computed tomography (CT) scanning - also a standard method used in everyday clinical workflows. Secondly, soft tissue is notoriously difficult to examine using CT equipment. Samples have to be stained to render them visible in the first place. Stains for CT scanning are sometimes highly toxic, and they are also extremely time-consuming to apply. At times they modify the tissue to such an extent that further analysis is then impossible. These images were created using the new staining method: left: Micro-CT image of a mouse kidney, right: Nano-CT image of the same tissue. Credit: Mueller, Pfeiffer / TUM / reproduced with permission from PNAS.
"Our approach included developing a special pre-treatment so that we can use eosin anyway," outlines chemist Dr. Madleen Busse. The staining method is so time-efficient that it is also suited to everyday clinical workflows. "Another important benefit is that there are no problems using established methods to examine the tissue sample following the scan," adds Busse. TUM. Posted: Feb 22, 2018. Nota do Scientific Editor: O artigo que deu origem a esta matéria de título: "Three-dimensional virtual histology enabled through cytoplasm-specific X-ray stain for microscopic and nanoscopic computed tomography", de autoria de Madleen Busse, Mark Müller, Melanie A. Kimm, Simone Ferstl, Sebastian Allner, Klaus Achterhold, Julia Herzen and Franz Pfeiffer, foi publicado na PNAS em 20 de fevereiro de 2018, https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1720862115. |
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