RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Localizing Microemboli within the Rodent Brain through Block-Face Imaging and Atlas Registration JF eneuro JO eNeuro FD Society for Neuroscience SP ENEURO.0216-21.2021 DO 10.1523/ENEURO.0216-21.2021 VO 8 IS 4 A1 Matthew W. McDonald A1 Matthew S. Jeffers A1 Melissa Filadelfi A1 Andrea Vicencio A1 Gavin Heidenreich A1 Junzheng Wu A1 Gergely Silasi YR 2021 UL http://www.eneuro.org/content/8/4/ENEURO.0216-21.2021.abstract AB Brain microinfarcts are prevalent in humans, however because of the inherent difficulty of identifying and localizing individual microinfarcts, brain-wide quantification is impractical. In mice, microinfarcts have been created by surgically introducing microemboli into the brain, but a major limitation of this model is the absence of automated methods to identify and localize individual occlusions. We present a novel and semi-automated workflow to identify the anatomic location of fluorescent emboli (microspheres) within the mouse brain through histologic processing and atlas registration. By incorporating vibratome block-face imaging with the QuickNII brain registration tool, we show that the anatomic location of microspheres can be accurately registered to brain structures within the Allen mouse brain (AMB) atlas (e.g., somatomotor areas, hippocampal region, visual areas, etc.). Compared with registering images of slide mounted sections to the AMB atlas, microsphere location was more accurately determined when block-face images were used. As a proof of principle, using this workflow we compared the distribution of microspheres within the brains of mice that were either perfused or immersion fixed. No significant effect of perfusion on total microsphere number or location was detected. In general, microspheres were distributed brain-wide, with the largest density found in the thalamus. In sum, our block-face imaging workflow enables efficient characterization of the widespread distribution of fluorescent microemboli, facilitating future investigation into the impact of microinfarct load and location on brain health.