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Nondestructive, Epi‐Illumination Surface Microscopic Characterization of Surface Discontinuity in Bone: A New Approach Offers a Descriptive Vocabulary and New Insights
Author(s) -
Rothschild Bruce M.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
the anatomical record
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.678
H-Index - 62
eISSN - 1932-8494
pISSN - 1932-8486
DOI - 10.1002/ar.22673
Subject(s) - discontinuity (linguistics) , anatomy , medicine , pathology , geology , materials science , mathematics , mathematical analysis
Perspectives are in the eye of the beholder and are expanded with increased scrutiny (e.g., magnification). The term “porosity' for macroscopically or radiologically identifiable discontinuity in bone is so variably applied as to be incomprehensible in its meanings. A closer examination of surface discontinuity seems appropriate. Histological and atomic level analysis of bone alterations misses the forest for the trees and the former destroys the very subject it attempts to characterize. Surface discontinuity was therefore evaluated at the three‐dimensional submacroscopic level. An epifluorescent/illumination microscope was used to characterize surface discontinuity in intact specimens of known pathophysiology and/or derivation. The derived perspectives were then utilized to characterize other surface discontinuity. The smooth boundaries of vascular foramen and internal bifurcation, continuity of the expanded base of nerve structures and surrounding elevated rings of Sharpey fibers are all clearly distinguishable from fronts of resorption in erosive arthritis, serpentine discontinuity associated with infectious processes, specific zones of resorption noted in tuberculosis, and structural bone exposure by taphonomic abrasion. These perspectives allow the bone pathology associated with hematoma to be characterized as accentuated Sharpey fiber insertions; maxillary and sphenoid surface discontinuity, as vascular in origin; and periosteal reaction, as manifest by superficial bifurcating channels and in‐growth, similar to healing trephanation. Epi‐illumination microscopy bridges macroscopic and histological examination, providing greater understanding of the pathology, at no cost to the integrity of the material studied. It explains a number of observed results, while providing discriminatory descriptions of phenomena for which pathophysiology has not yet been clarified. Anat Rec, 296:580–589, 2013. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.