High-resolution three-dimensional atlas of congenital heart defects based on micro-CT images of human postmortem wax-infiltrated heart specimens.

Cardiovasc Pathol

The Cardiac Registry, Departments of Cardiology, Pathology, and Cardiac Surgery, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, MA; Department of Pathology, Boston Children's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.

Published: November 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Postmortem heart specimens are crucial for studying congenital heart defects but are increasingly difficult to obtain, prompting the need for effective archiving methods.
  • The study scanned 88 wax-infiltrated heart specimens using advanced imaging and 3D printing technology to create detailed digital models, forming an interactive online atlas.
  • The results highlighted a variety of heart defects in the specimens, and the methods developed are valuable for preserving and sharing these important anatomical resources.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Postmortem heart specimens are essential for education and research on the anatomy, morphology, and pathology of congenital heart defects. However, such specimens are rarely obtained these days, and the specimens stored in formalin are inexorably deteriorating. This study aimed to develop methods to archive three-dimensional data of rare human heart specimens and to publish the data.

Methods: All wax-infiltrated human postmortem heart specimens stored in the Cardiac Registry, Boston Children's Hospital were scanned using microfocus computed tomography (X-Tek HMXST225, Nikon Metrology, Inc.), and reproduced using a three-dimensional printer (Form 3B, Formlabs Inc.). The digital models were published as an interactive three-dimensional online atlas. The resolution of the three-dimensional data was evaluated.

Results: The primary diagnoses in the 88 specimens included in the study include normal cardiac anatomy (11 cases), transposition of the great arteries {S,D,D} (11 cases), ventricular septal defect (10 cases), double-outlet right ventricle (9 cases), hypoplastic left heart syndrome (9 cases), and common atrioventricular canal (7 cases). Twenty-five cases (28%) underwent previous surgical or percutaneous interventions to the heart, including Mustard procedure (1 case), Senning procedure (2 cases, one was performed on a postmortem heart specimen). The median voxel size of the three-dimensional data was 40.5 um (IQR, 32.8-64.2). All intracardiac structures were precisely reproduced as digital and physical three-dimensional models.

Conclusions: The methods and resultant models were considered useful for archiving and furthering the utilization of these invaluable specimens. The atlas is available at https://www.sketchfab.com/heartmodels/collections.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.carpath.2024.107690DOI Listing

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