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Abstract
The purpose of this study was to explain the morphology and significance of string
vessels in human brains. Brain slices (1.5 cm thick) were embedded in celloidin, sections
cut at 100 microm and stained with antibody to collagen IV. A second component of
the study was a 3-D rotational study for which we used sections stained with propidium
iodide for cell nuclei and anti-collagen stain for blood vessel basement membranes.
The materials consisted of brain from two infants at 28 and 35 weeks gestation, two
term infants at 20 days and 3 months, one 5 years old, and 3 adults aged 25, 57, and
84 years. String vessels were counted in at least six fields of deep white matter
using a 10x objective and the counts averaged and expressed as string vessels per
cubic mm. The 3-D rotational study using confocal microscopy was designed to find
nuclei in string vessels. The least number of string vessels were present in the premature
infant. All others had comparably similar numbers of string vessels except the two
term-born infants in whom there was a 3-5-fold increase. However, the two brains had
other pathologic lesions, which could affect the counts. In normal brains, string
vessels appear as a singe line of stain and usually connect two arterioles or capillaries.
They can form loops and occasionally a string vessel may continue into a normal capillary.
String vessels have rare nuclei. Our study indicates that string vessels are present
in utero, increase in number and are present throughout life. Their exact nature remains
unexplained. They apparently do not represent age-related acquired atrophy of capillaries
because they are present at all ages and do not progressively increase with normal
aging. This technique appears suitable for the study of large number of string vessels.