DocumentCode :
15484
Title :
Quantitative Analysis of Cardiac Tissue Including Fibroblasts Using Three-Dimensional Confocal Microscopy and Image Reconstruction: Towards a Basis for Electrophysiological Modeling
Author :
Schwab, B.C. ; Seemann, G. ; Lasher, R.A. ; Torres, N.S. ; Wulfers, E.M. ; Arp, M. ; Carruth, E.D. ; Bridge, J.H.B. ; Sachse, F.B.
Author_Institution :
Inst. of Biomed. Eng., Karlsruhe Inst. of Technol., Karlsruhe, Germany
Volume :
32
Issue :
5
fYear :
2013
fDate :
May-13
Firstpage :
862
Lastpage :
872
Abstract :
Electrophysiological modeling of cardiac tissue is commonly based on functional and structural properties measured in experiments. Our knowledge of these properties is incomplete, in particular their remodeling in disease. Here, we introduce a methodology for quantitative tissue characterization based on fluorescent labeling, 3-D scanning confocal microscopy, image processing and reconstruction of tissue micro-structure at sub-micrometer resolution. We applied this methodology to normal rabbit ventricular tissue and tissue from hearts with myocardial infarction. Our analysis revealed that the volume fraction of fibroblasts increased from 4.83±0.42% (mean ± standard deviation) in normal tissue up to 6.51±0.38% in myocardium from infarcted hearts. The myocyte volume fraction decreased from 76.20±9.89% in normal to 73.48±8.02% adjacent to the infarct. Numerical field calculations on 3-D reconstructions of the extracellular space yielded an extracellular longitudinal conductivity of 0.264±0.082 S/m with an anisotropy ratio of 2.095±1.11 in normal tissue. Adjacent to the infarct, the longitudinal conductivity increased up to 0.400±0.051 S/m, but the anisotropy ratio decreased to 1.295±0.09. Our study indicates an increased density of gap junctions proximal to both fibroblasts and myocytes in infarcted versus normal tissue, supporting previous hypotheses of electrical coupling of fibroblasts and myocytes in infarcted hearts. We suggest that the presented methodology provides an important contribution to modeling normal and diseased tissue. Applications of the methodology include the clinical characterization of disease-associated remodeling.
Keywords :
bioelectric phenomena; biological tissues; biomedical optical imaging; cardiology; cellular biophysics; diseases; image reconstruction; medical image processing; optical microscopy; 3-D scanning confocal microscopy; anisotropy ratio; cardiac tissue; disease-associated remodeling; diseased tissue; electrical coupling; electrophysiological modeling; extracellular longitudinal conductivity; extracellular space; fibroblasts; fluorescent labeling; hearts; image processing; image reconstruction; myocardial infarction; myocyte volume fraction; myocytes; numerical field calculations; quantitative analysis; rabbit ventricular tissue; three-dimensional confocal microscopy; tissue microstructure reconstruction; Cardiac tissue; Conductivity; Extracellular; Heart; Labeling; Microscopy; Computational analysis of cardiac tissue; confocal microscopy; fibroblasts; gap junctions; myocardial infarction; Animals; Connexins; Electric Conductivity; Electrophysiological Phenomena; Fibroblasts; Fluorescent Dyes; Gap Junctions; Heart; Imaging, Three-Dimensional; Microscopy, Confocal; Models, Cardiovascular; Myocardial Infarction; Myocardium; Myocytes, Cardiac; Rabbits;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0278-0062
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TMI.2013.2240693
Filename :
6414638
Link To Document :
بازگشت