Abstract

Collagen is an important component in maintaining structural integrity and functionality of tissues and is modulated in various biological processes. Its visualization and possible quantification using histopathological stains can be important for understanding disease progression or therapeutic response. Visualization of collagen fiber with the histological stain picrosirius red (PSR) is enhanced with polarized light and quantitative analysis is possible using circular polarizers. However, linear polarizers are more commonly available and easier to optically align. The objective of the present study is to demonstrate a novel image acquisition technique and analysis method using linearly polarized light. The proposed imaging technique is based on image acquisition at multiple slide rotation angles, which are co-registered to form a composite image used for quantitative analysis by pixel intensity or pixel counting. The technique was demonstrated on multiple human coronary samples with varying histopathologies and developed specifically to analyze cap collagen in atherosclerotic plaque. Pixel counting image analysis was found to be reproducible across serial tissue sections and across different users and sufficiently sensitive to detect differences in cap structural integrity that are likely relevant to prediction of rupture risk. The benefit of slide rotation angle under linear polarization to acquire images represents a feasible and practical implementation for expanding the general utility of PSR for quantitative analysis.

Highlights

  • Fibrillar collagen makes up over 5% of the human body and is the main structural and strength producing component in many organs including tendons, skin, ligaments and the heart [1,2]

  • The motivation of our study is to develop a reproducible fibrillar collagen quantification technique based on images acquired as the sample was rotated under linearly polarized light, from which a composite image was created and pixel counting analysis was performed

  • It is known that colors in histology slides can vary due to inconsistencies, such as in the sample thickness and staining, despite the use of the same chemical dye [21]

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Summary

Introduction

Fibrillar collagen makes up over 5% of the human body and is the main structural and strength producing component in many organs including tendons, skin, ligaments and the heart [1,2]. Extracellular matrix materials, predominantly collagen and elastin, comprise. Robust quantitative assessment of collagen fibers with picrosirius red stain and linearly polarized light parts, tissue samples, histology processing, and the fee for manuscript publication

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