1. Multiscale imaging of colitis in mice using confocal laser endomicroscopy, light-sheet fluorescence microscopy, and magnetic resonance imaging
- Author
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Xin Yang, Hui Hui, He Ma, Jie Tian, Tianmeng Li, and Chaoen Hu
- Subjects
Male ,Paper ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Colon ,Biomedical Engineering ,01 natural sciences ,Imaging ,multimodality imaging ,law.invention ,010309 optics ,Biomaterials ,Mice ,inflammatory bowel disease ,Confocal microscopy ,law ,In vivo ,0103 physical sciences ,Microscopy ,Fluorescence microscope ,Endomicroscopy ,medicine ,Animals ,Coloring Agents ,Inflammation ,Microscopy, Confocal ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Lasers ,Endoscopy ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Colitis ,Inflammatory Bowel Diseases ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,light-sheet fluorescence microscopy ,Microscopy, Fluorescence ,Light sheet fluorescence microscopy ,Disease Progression ,confocal laser endomicroscopy ,business ,Preclinical imaging - Abstract
The objective of our study is to develop a multimodality approach by combining magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and optical imaging methods to assess acute murine colitis at the macro- and microscopic level. In vivo MRI is used to measure the cross-sectional areas of colons at the macroscopic level. Dual-color confocal laser endomicroscopy (CLE) allows in vivo examination of the fluorescently labeled epithelial cells and microvessels in the mucosa with a spatial resolution of ∼1.4 μm during ongoing endoscopy. To further validate the structural changes of the colons in three-dimensions, ex vivo light-sheet fluorescence microscopy (LSFM) is applied for in-toto imaging of cleared colon sections. MRI, LSFM, and CLE findings are significantly correlated with histological scoring (p
- Published
- 2019