A Survey of Methods for 3D Histology Reconstruction

被引:134
作者
Pichat, Jonas [1 ]
Iglesias, Juan Eugenio [1 ]
Yousry, Tarek [2 ]
Ourselin, Sebastien [1 ,3 ]
Modat, Marc [1 ]
机构
[1] UCL, CMIC, Translat Imaging Grp, London, England
[2] UCL Inst Neurol, Dept Brain Repair & Rehabil, London, England
[3] UCL, Wellcome EPSRC Ctr Intervent & Surg Sci, London, England
基金
欧洲研究理事会; 英国工程与自然科学研究理事会; 欧盟第七框架计划;
关键词
Histology; 3D reconstruction; Registration; Medical imaging; MRI; IN-VIVO MRI; GUIDED VOLUME RECONSTRUCTION; AUTOMATED IMAGE REGISTRATION; MAGNETIC-RESONANCE IMAGE; GLOBAL ENERGY FUNCTION; MOUSE-BRAIN; 3-DIMENSIONAL RECONSTRUCTION; RAT-BRAIN; EX-VIVO; NONRIGID REGISTRATION;
D O I
10.1016/j.media.2018.02.004
中图分类号
TP18 [人工智能理论];
学科分类号
081104 ; 0812 ; 0835 ; 1405 ;
摘要
Histology permits the observation of otherwise invisible structures of the internal topography of a specimen. Although it enables the investigation of tissues at a cellular level, it is invasive and breaks topology due to cutting. Three-dimensional (3D) reconstruction was thus introduced to overcome the limitations of single-section studies in a dimensional scope. 3D reconstruction finds its roots in embryology, where it enabled the visualisation of spatial relationships of developing systems and organs, and extended to biomedicine, where the observation of individual, stained sections provided only partial understanding of normal and abnormal tissues. However, despite bringing visual awareness, recovering realistic reconstructions is elusive without prior knowledge about the tissue shape. 3D medical imaging made such structural ground truths available. In addition, combining non-invasive imaging with histology unveiled invaluable opportunities to relate macroscopic information to the underlying microscopic properties of tissues through the establishment of spatial correspondences; image registration is one technique that permits the automation of such a process and we describe reconstruction methods that rely on it. It is thereby possible to recover the original topology of histology and lost relationships, gain insight into what affects the signals used to construct medical images (and characterise them), or build high resolution anatomical atlases. This paper reviews almost three decades of methods for 3D histology reconstruction from serial sections, used in the study of many different types of tissue. We first summarise the process that produces digitised sections from a tissue specimen in order to understand the peculiarity of the data, the associated artefacts and some possible ways to minimise them. We then describe methods for 3D histology reconstruction with and without the help of 3D medical imaging, along with methods of validation and some applications. We finally attempt to identify the trends and challenges that the field is facing, many of which are derived from the cross-disciplinary nature of the problem as it involves the collaboration between physicists, histolopathologists, computer scientists and physicians. (C) 2018 Published by Elsevier B.V.
引用
收藏
页码:73 / 105
页数:33
相关论文
共 424 条
[1]   Postmortem Magnetic Resonance Imaging to Guide the Pathologic Cut: Individualized, 3-Dimensionally Printed Cutting Boxes for Fixed Brains [J].
Absinta, Martina ;
Nair, Govind ;
Filippi, Massimo ;
Ray-Chaudhury, Abhik ;
Reyes-Mantilla, Maria I. ;
Pardo, Carlos A. ;
Reich, Daniel S. .
JOURNAL OF NEUROPATHOLOGY AND EXPERIMENTAL NEUROLOGY, 2014, 73 (08) :780-788
[2]   Statistical distributions in the folding of elastic structures [J].
Adda-Bedia, Mokhtar ;
Boudaoud, Arezki ;
Boue, Laurent ;
Deboeuf, Stephanie .
JOURNAL OF STATISTICAL MECHANICS-THEORY AND EXPERIMENT, 2010,
[3]  
Adler Daniel H., 2016, Medical Image Computing and Computer-Assisted Intervention - MICCAI 2016. 19th International Conference. Proceedings: LNCS 9902, P63, DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-46726-9_8
[4]   Histology-derived volumetric annotation of the human hippocampal subfields in postmortem MRI [J].
Adler, Daniel H. ;
Pluta, John ;
Kadivar, Salmon ;
Craige, Caryne ;
Gee, James C. ;
Avants, Brian B. ;
Yushkevich, Paul A. .
NEUROIMAGE, 2014, 84 :505-523
[5]   Fast Explicit Diffusion for Accelerated Features in Nonlinear Scale Spaces [J].
Alcantarilla, Pablo F. ;
Nuevo, Jesus ;
Bartoli, Adrien .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH MACHINE VISION CONFERENCE 2013, 2013,
[6]   KAZE Features [J].
Alcantarilla, Pablo Fernandez ;
Bartoli, Adrien ;
Davison, Andrew J. .
COMPUTER VISION - ECCV 2012, PT VI, 2012, 7577 :214-227
[7]  
Alegro M., 2016, P IEEE C COMP VIS PA, P194
[8]   Registering coronal histological 2-D sections of a rat brain with coronal sections of a 3-D brain atlas using geometric curve invariants and B-spline representation [J].
Ali, WSI ;
Cohen, FS .
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON MEDICAL IMAGING, 1998, 17 (06) :957-966
[9]   Facilitating Tumor Functional Assessment by Spatially Relating 3D Tumor Histology and In Vivo MRI: Image Registration Approach [J].
Alic, Lejla ;
Haeck, Joost C. ;
Bol, Karin ;
Klein, Stefan ;
van Tiel, Sandra T. ;
Wielepolski, Piotr A. ;
de Jong, Marion ;
Niessen, Wiro J. ;
Bernsen, Monique ;
Veenland, Jifke F. .
PLOS ONE, 2011, 6 (08)
[10]   Multi-atlas based segmentation of brain images: Atlas selection and its effect on accuracy [J].
Aljabar, P. ;
Heckemann, R. A. ;
Hammers, A. ;
Hajnal, J. V. ;
Rueckert, D. .
NEUROIMAGE, 2009, 46 (03) :726-738