Medical Research Archives |https://esmed.org/MRA/index.php/mra/article/view/4302 1
OPEN ACCESS
Published: August 31, 2023
Citation: Miura K and Iwashita T,
2023. Simultaneous Evaluation of
Stiffness and Histology in
Orthopedic Diseases Using
Scanning Acoustic Microscope,
Medical Research Archives, [online]
11(8).
https://doi.org/10.18103/mra.v
11i8.4302
Copyright: © 2023 European
Society of Medicine. This is an
open-access article distributed
under the terms of the Creative
Commons Attribution License, which
permits unrestricted use,
distribution, and reproduction in
any medium, provided the original
author and source are credited.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.18103/mra.v
11i8.4302
ISSN: 2375-1924
RESEARCH ARTICLE
Simultaneous Evaluation of Stiffness and
Histology in Orthopedic Diseases Using
Scanning Acoustic Microscope
Katsutoshi Miura
1*
, Toshihide Iwashita
1
1
Department of Regenerative & Infectious Pathology, Hamamatsu
University School of Medicine
*
Correspondence author: kmiura.hama.med@gmail.com
ABSTRACT
Organs with different levels of stiffness support the musculoskeletal
system. Light microscopy cannot evaluate organ stiffness, whereas
scanning acoustic microscopy (SAM) discriminates stiffness based on
speed-of-sound (SOS) because sound waves pass faster in stiffer
tissues. This study aimed to evaluate SOS imaging for orthopedic
diseases using formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded sections. SOS
imaging in SAM uses unstained light microscopic (LM) sections to
prevent the bias of staining variation. Digital SOS values are
comparable in different organ components and diseases.
Mouse organs with the lowest mean SOS values included the adipose
tissue, bone marrow, calcified cartilage, and nucleus pulposus; those
with intermediate values included hyaline cartilages, osteoid,
skeletal muscles, cortical and trabecular bones, and ligaments; and
those with the highest values comprised fibrocartilages of the
vertebral disc and meniscus. Water contents and delipidating
procedures decreased SOS values. Collagenous density and
arrangement affected higher SOS values. The trabecular bones of
mice were thinner and showed significantly lower values of SOS than
those of humans.
Various orthopedic diseases and disorders displayed the
characteristic SOS images. In osteoporosis, the trabecular bone
becomes thin with lower SOS, indicating lesser stiffness to cause
fractures. Comparison of woven and lamellar bones revealed that
woven bones with lower SOS had lesser stiffness to fracture.
Changes in SOS values indicated intramembranous bone formation.
The trabecular bone develops from the connective tissues with an
abrupt increase in SOS values. The regenerating process of bone
fractures was monitored using SOS images, in which the granulation
tissues transformed into calli in the osteoid to grow a new
mineralized bone. The stiffness increased in phases, which appeared
in SOS values.
Although several methods have been used to visualize the stiffness
of biological tissues, SAM only needs 10-µm unstained slides and
can simultaneously compare mechanical stiffness and histology. SOS
images provide informative mechanical alterations of the bone,
cartilage, and connective tissues to assess the status and diagnose a
disorder.