Close Menu
Health Care Today
  • Home
  • News
  • Fitness
  • Nutrition
  • Skin Care
  • Women’s Health
  • More
    • Mental Well-Being
    • Sexual Health
    • Press Release
    • Editor’s Picks
What's On
Journalists Shine Light on Out-of-Reach Insurance Prices, AI’s Role in Claims Disputes, and Susie Wiles

Journalists Shine Light on Out-of-Reach Insurance Prices, AI’s Role in Claims Disputes, and Susie Wiles

March 21, 2026
Disability: a practical sheet to improve the oncology journey

Disability: a practical sheet to improve the oncology journey

March 21, 2026
‘How Low Can You Go?’ The Shifting Guidelines for Blood Pressure Control

‘How Low Can You Go?’ The Shifting Guidelines for Blood Pressure Control

March 21, 2026
45% keep weight off a year after stopping GLP-1 drugs, study finds

45% keep weight off a year after stopping GLP-1 drugs, study finds

March 21, 2026
This common vaccine cuts heart risk nearly in half in new study

This common vaccine cuts heart risk nearly in half in new study

March 20, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Health Care Today
  • Home
  • News
  • Fitness
  • Nutrition
  • Skin Care
  • Women’s Health
  • More
    • Mental Well-Being
    • Sexual Health
    • Press Release
    • Editor’s Picks
Subscribe
Health Care Today
Home » Simple light trick reveals hidden brain pathways in microscopic detail
Sexual Health

Simple light trick reveals hidden brain pathways in microscopic detail

staffBy staffFebruary 27, 2026
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email Telegram WhatsApp Copy Link
Simple light trick reveals hidden brain pathways in microscopic detail

Every tissue in the human body contains exceptionally small fibers that help coordinate how organs move, function and communicate. Muscle fibers guide physical force, intestinal fibers support the motion of the digestive tract, and brain fibers carry electrical signals that allow different regions to exchange information. Together, these intricate fiber systems help shape the structure of each organ and keep them operating properly.

Many diseases disrupt these delicate networks. In the brain, damage to fiber connections appears across nearly all neurological disorders, where it contributes to changes in neural communication.

Although these microscopic structures play essential roles, they have long been challenging to study. Researchers have struggled to determine how fibers are oriented inside tissues, which has made it difficult to fully understand how they change in health and disease.

A Simple Method for Revealing Hidden Microstructure

A research team led by Marios Georgiadis, PhD, instructor of neuroimaging, has now introduced an approach that makes these hard-to-see fiber patterns visible with exceptional clarity and at a relatively low cost.

Their technique, described in Nature Communicationsis known as computational scattered light imaging (ComSLI). It can reveal the orientation and organization of tissue fibers at micrometer resolution on virtually any histology slide, regardless of how it was stained or preserved — even if the slide is many decades old.

Michael Zeineh, MD, PhD, professor of radiology, served as co-senior author with Miriam Menzel, PhD, a former visiting scholar in Zeineh’s laboratory.

“The information about tissue structures has always been there, hidden in plain sight,” Georgiadis said. “ComSLI simply gives us a way to see that information and map it out.”

How ComSLI Maps Fiber Orientation

Traditional imaging strategies come with significant limitations. MRI can highlight large anatomical networks but cannot capture tiny cellular structures. Histology techniques often require specialized stains, high-end equipment and carefully preserved samples, and they still struggle to depict fiber crossings clearly.

ComSLI relies on a basic physical principle: when light encounters microscopic structures, it scatters in different directions based on their orientation. By rotating the light source and recording how the scattering signal changes, researchers can reconstruct the direction of the fibers within each pixel of an image.

The method requires only a rotating LED light and a microscope camera, making the setup accessible compared with other forms of advanced microscopy. After the images are collected, software analyzes delicate patterns in the scattered light to generate color-coded maps of fiber orientation and density, known as microstructure-informed fiber orientation distributions.

ComSLI is not limited by sample preparation. It works with formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded sections (a standard in hospitals and pathology labs) as well as fresh-frozen, stained or unstained slides.

Scientists can also revisit slides originally created for unrelated projects, even those stored for decades, allowing new structural insights without altering the samples.

“This is a tool that any lab can use,” Zeineh said. “You don’t need specialized preparation or expensive equipment. What excites me most is that this approach opens the door for anyone, from small research labs to pathology labs, to uncover new insights from slides they already have.”

Mapping Neural Microstructure and Disease

A major goal in neuroscience has been to chart the brain’s microscopic pathways with high precision. Using ComSLI, Georgiadis and colleagues visualized full formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded human brain sections and standard-sized slides, revealing detailed fiber structures throughout the tissue.

They also examined how these fibers change in neurological conditions such as multiple sclerosis, leukoencephalopathy and Alzheimer’s disease.

One focus was the hippocampus, a deep-brain region central to memory formation and retrieval and often affected early in neurodegeneration. When comparing a hippocampal section from a patient with Alzheimer’s disease to a healthy sample, the team observed clear structural deterioration. Fiber crossings that normally help connect regions of the hippocampus were greatly diminished, and a major pathway responsible for bringing memory-related signals into the region (the perforant pathway) was barely visible. The healthy hippocampus, in contrast, showed a dense and interconnected network of fibers across the entire area. With these detailed maps, researchers can see how memory circuits break down as disease progresses.

To test the limits of the method, the researchers analyzed a brain section prepared in 1904. Even in this century-old sample, ComSLI identified intricate fiber patterns, allowing scientists to study historical specimens and explore how structural features evolve across generations of disease.

Applications Beyond the Brain

Although first designed for brain research, ComSLI also works well in other tissues. The team used it to study muscle, bone and vascular samples, each revealing unique fiber arrangements tied to their biological functions.

In tongue muscle, the method highlighted layered fiber orientations linked to movement and flexibility. In bone, it captured collagen fibers that align with mechanical stress. In arteries, it showed alternating collagen and elastin layers that support both strength and elasticity.

This ability to map fiber orientation across species, organs and archival specimens could significantly change how scientists investigate structure and function. It also means that millions of stored slides around the world may contain untapped microstructural information.

“Although we just presented the method, there are already multiple requests for scanning samples and replicating the ComSLI setup — so many labs and clinics would like to have micron-resolution fiber orientation and micro-connectivity on their histology sections,” Georgiadis said. “Another exciting plan is to go back to well-characterized brain archives or brain sections of famous people, and recover this micro-connectivity information, revealing ‘secrets’ that have been considered long lost. This is the beauty of ComSLI.”

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Articles

This common vaccine cuts heart risk nearly in half in new study

This common vaccine cuts heart risk nearly in half in new study

March 20, 2026
New non-surgical contraceptive implant is delivered through tiny needles

New non-surgical contraceptive implant is delivered through tiny needles

March 17, 2026
DNA origami vaccines could be the next leap beyond mRNA

DNA origami vaccines could be the next leap beyond mRNA

March 17, 2026
Top Articles
Ways by Which Your Partner Impacts Your Life: Therapist Explains

Ways by Which Your Partner Impacts Your Life: Therapist Explains

January 8, 2020
Mobile Calls Associated With Risk of High Blood Pressure

Mobile Calls Associated With Risk of High Blood Pressure

January 6, 2020
Review: 7 Future Fashion Trends Shaping the Future of Fashion

Review: 7 Future Fashion Trends Shaping the Future of Fashion

January 10, 2020
Journalists Shine Light on Out-of-Reach Insurance Prices, AI’s Role in Claims Disputes, and Susie Wiles

Journalists Shine Light on Out-of-Reach Insurance Prices, AI’s Role in Claims Disputes, and Susie Wiles

March 21, 2026
Average Mobile Data Usage Now Exceeds 10GB Per Month

Average Mobile Data Usage Now Exceeds 10GB Per Month

January 5, 2020
Don't Miss
In the Affordability Alphabet Soup of the ACA and EHBs, a Link to Higher Premiums Isn’t Clear-Cut
Blog

In the Affordability Alphabet Soup of the ACA and EHBs, a Link to Higher Premiums Isn’t Clear-Cut

March 20, 2026

Julie Appleby, KFF Health News When President Donald Trump unveiled his one-page outline to address…

Behavioral Economics in Fitness Coaching

Behavioral Economics in Fitness Coaching

March 20, 2026
Listen: Trump’s NIH ‘Reset’ Is Driving Away Scientists

Listen: Trump’s NIH ‘Reset’ Is Driving Away Scientists

March 20, 2026
EPSM du Loiret: a mobile team works at home in conjunction with social landlords

EPSM du Loiret: a mobile team works at home in conjunction with social landlords

March 20, 2026
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Contact
© 2026 Health Care Today. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.