Abstract

It is commonly known that brain metastases usually have clear boundaries in magnetic resonance imaging. However, little is known regarding the trajectory of white matter fibers around the tumors, especially using the fiber dissection technique. Here, we focused on the anatomical interaction between white matter fibers and the tumor, using the fiber dissection in a postmortem brain with metastatic tumor and compared the findings with those of diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) tractography. One postmortem human brain hemisphere with metastatic adenocarcinoma in the Broca’s area was dissected using fiber dissection following the Klingler’s method. In order to compare the in vitro and in vivo results, additional brains from 15 patients with metastatic adenocarcinomas, the volumes of which were comparable to that of the adenocarcinoma in the brain used for fiber dissection, were analyzed using DTI tractographic reconstruction. Morphological findings of white matter bundles running around the tumor were compared between the two techniques. In the fiber dissection technique, the superior longitudinal fascicle, arcuate fascicle, and frontal aslant tract could be dissected, and the white matter bundles were curved and retracted to avoid the tumor. In all the cases analyzed, white matter fibers or streamlines surrounding the tumor avoided the lesion. Using the fiber dissection technique, this is the first direct evidence to elucidate the anatomy of white matter fibers affected by a metastatic brain. This suggests that brain metastatic adenocarcinoma is an intra-axial neoplasm with extra-axial white matter structures.

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