4.4 Article

Full-field optical coherence microscopy is a novel technique for imaging enteric ganglia in the gastrointestinal tract

Journal

NEUROGASTROENTEROLOGY AND MOTILITY
Volume 24, Issue 12, Pages e611-e621

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/nmo.12035

Keywords

enteric nervous system; enteric neuropathies; Hirschsprung's disease; optical coherence microscopy; optical coherence tomography

Funding

  1. NIH [R01HL076398, R01HL093717, R01CA103769, R01DK091923]
  2. University Hospital of Nantes
  3. SanTdige Foundation
  4. Nantes Metropole
  5. [R01DK080914]

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Background Noninvasive methods are needed to improve the diagnosis of enteric neuropathies. Full-field optical coherence microscopy (FFOCM) is a novel optical microscopy modality that can acquire 1 mu m resolution images of tissue. The objective of this research was to demonstrate FFOCM imaging for the characterization of the enteric nervous system (ENS). Methods Normal mice and EdnrB-/- mice, a model of Hirschsprungs disease (HD), were imaged in three-dimensions ex vivo using FFOCM through the entire thickness and length of the gut. Quantitative analysis of myenteric ganglia was performed on FFOCM images obtained from whole-mount tissues and compared with immunohistochemistry imaged by confocal microscopy. Key Results Full-field optical coherence microscopy enabled visualization of the full thickness gut wall from serosa to mucosa. Images of the myenteric plexus were successfully acquired from the stomach, duodenum, colon, and rectum. Quantification of ganglionic neuronal counts on FFOCM images revealed strong interobserver agreement and identical values to those obtained by immunofluorescence microscopy. In EdnrB-/- mice, FFOCM analysis revealed a significant decrease in ganglia density along the colorectum and a significantly lower density of ganglia in all colorectal segments compared with normal mice. Conclusions & Inferences Full-field optical coherence microscopy enables optical microscopic imaging of the ENS within the bowel wall along the entire intestine. FFOCM is able to differentiate ganglionic from aganglionic colon in a mouse model of HD, and can provide quantitative assessment of ganglionic density. With further refinements that enable bowel wall imaging in vivo, this technology has the potential to revolutionize the characterization of the ENS and the diagnosis of enteric neuropathies.

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