Brain tissue microarrays in dementia research: white matter microvascular pathology in Alzheimer's disease

M Sjöbeck, M Haglund, A Persson… - …, 2003 - Wiley Online Library
M Sjöbeck, M Haglund, A Persson, K Sturesson, E Englund
Neuropathology, 2003Wiley Online Library
Tissue microarrays (TMA) consist of up to 1000 cylindrical tissue cores from different donor
paraffin blocks relocated into one recipient block, allowing for efficient histopathological
studies by fluorescence in situ hybridization, RNA in situ hybridization or
immunohistochemistry. On the background of the increasing interest of the TMA technique in
cancer research and the suggestion of its application also in studies of non‐neoplastic
intracranial disorders, the technique was applied to pathologic white matter in AD brains …
Tissue microarrays (TMA) consist of up to 1000 cylindrical tissue cores from different donor paraffin blocks relocated into one recipient block, allowing for efficient histopathological studies by fluorescence in situ hybridization, RNA in situ hybridization or immunohistochemistry. On the background of the increasing interest of the TMA technique in cancer research and the suggestion of its application also in studies of non‐neoplastic intracranial disorders, the technique was applied to pathologic white matter in AD brains. Eight cases with AD and concomitant white matter pathology were neuropathologically diagnosed on whole brain coronal slides. The TMA technique was used to grade severity of white matter pathology and to quantify small vessels with traditional staining and immunohistochemical markers. These measurements were compared with the whole brain neuropathological assessment. The technique produced good results with preserved tissue structures as confirmed by the whole brain evaluation. Severity of white matter pathology evaluated on the TMA cores correlated negatively with small vessel quantities, and statistically significant differences in vessel quantities paralleled different grades of white matter pathology. It is concluded that the TMA technique could be further utilized in studies of dementing disorders, and may have its advantages in large, clinically well‐characterized materials (e.g. in quantitative mapping of white matter changes).
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