Abstract
AbstractWe reconstructed serial sections of a representative adult human spleen to clarify the unknown arrangement of the splenic microvasculature, such as terminal arterioles, sheathed capillaries, the red pulp capillary network and venules. The resulting 3D model was evaluated in virtual reality (VR). Capillary sheaths often occurred after the second or third branching of a terminal arteriole and covered its capillary side or end branches. The sheaths started directly after the final smooth muscle cells of the arteriole and consisted of cuboidal CD271++ stromal sheath cells surrounded and infiltrated by B lymphocytes and macrophages. Some sheaths covered up to four sequential capillary bifurcations thus forming bizarre elongated structures. Each sheath had a unique form. Apart from symmetric dichotomous branchings inside the sheath, sheathed capillaries also gave off side branches, which crossed the sheath and freely ended at its surface. These side branches are likely to distribute materials from the incoming blood to sheath-associated B lymphocytes and macrophages and thus represent the first location for recognition of blood-borne antigens in the spleen. A few non-sheathed bypasses from terminal arterioles to the red pulp capillary network also exist. Red pulp venules are primarily supplied by sinuses, but they also exhibit a few connections to the capillary network. Thus, the human splenic red pulp harbors a primarily open microcirculation with a very minor closed part.
Funder
Philipps-Universität Marburg
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Cell Biology,Medical Laboratory Technology,Molecular Biology,Histology
Reference46 articles.
1. Ahrens J, Geveci B, Law C, ParaView (2005) An end-user tool for large data visualization. In: Hansen CD, Johnson CD (eds) Visualization handbook. Elsevier, Amsterdam, pp 717–732
2. Alt H, Guibas LJ (1999) Discrete geometric shapes: Matching, interpolation, and approximation. In: Sack J-R, Urrutia J (eds) Handbook of computational geometry, pp 121–153
3. Attali D, Cohen-Steiner D, Edelsbrunner H (2005) Extraction and simplification of iso-surfaces in tandem. In: Fellner D, Spencer S (eds) Proc. SGP ’05, Eurographics, pp 139–148.
4. Ayachit U (2015) The ParaView guide: A parallel visualization application. Kitware, New York
5. Berthold M (2017) VR-based visualization of medical data. BSc Thesis (University of Bayreuth)
Cited by
10 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献