High-resolution X-ray tomography of the human inner ear: Synchrotron radiation-based study of nerve fibre bundles, membranes and ganglion cells

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Abstract

Summary The combination of osmium tetroxide staining and high-resolution tomographic imaging using monochromatic X rays allows visualizing cellular structures of the human inner ear, that is, the organ of Corti, the stria vascularis and further soft tissues of the membranous labyrinth, in three-dimensional space with isotropic micrometre resolution. This approach permits to follow the course of nerve fibre bundles in a major part of the specimen and reveals the detailed three-dimensional arrangement of individual ganglion cells with distinct nuclei by means of X-ray tomography for the first time. The non-destructive neuron cell counting in a selected volume of 125 μm × 800 μm × 600 μm = 0.06 mm3 gives rise to the estimate that 2000 ganglion cells are present along 1 mm organ of Corti. © 2009 The Royal Microscopical Society.

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Lareida, A., Beckmann, F., Schrott-Fischer, A., Glueckert, R., Freysinger, W., & MÜller, B. (2009). High-resolution X-ray tomography of the human inner ear: Synchrotron radiation-based study of nerve fibre bundles, membranes and ganglion cells. Journal of Microscopy, 234(1), 95–102. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2818.2009.03143.x

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