Abstract

Neuroscientific research that requires brain tissue depends on brain banks that provide very small tissue samples fixed by immersion in neutral-buffered formalin (NBF), while anatomy laboratories could provide full brain specimens. However, these brains are generally fixed by perfusion of the full body with solutions other than NBF generally used by brain banks, such as an alcohol-formaldehyde solution (AFS) that is typically used for dissection and teaching. Therefore, fixation quality of these brains needs to be assessed to determine their usefulness in post-mortem investigations through magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and histology, two common neuroimaging modalities. Here, we report the characteristics of five brains fixed by full body perfusion of an AFS from our Anatomy Laboratory suspected of being poorly fixed, given the altered signal seen on T1w MRI scans in situ. We describe 1- the characteristics of the donors; 2- the fixation procedures applied for each case; 3- the tissue contrast characteristics of the T1w and T2w images; 4- the macroscopic tissue quality after extraction of the brains; 5- the macroscopic arterial characteristics and presence or absence of blood clots; and 6- four histological stains of the areas that we suspected were poorly fixed. We conclude that multiple factors can affect the fixation quality of the brain. Nevertheless, cases in which brain fixation is suboptimal, consequently altering the T1w signal, still have T2w of adequate gray-matter to white-matter contrast and may also be used for histology stains with sufficient quality.

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