Human developmental anatomy: microscopic magnetic resonance imaging (muMRI) of four human embryos (from Carnegie Stage 10 to 20).

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Date publication

décembre 2014

Auteurs

Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Dr NUZILLARD Jean-Marc


Tous les auteurs :
Lhuaire M, Martinez A, Kaplan H, Nuzillard JM, Renard Y, Tonnelet R, Braun M, Avisse C, Labrousse M

Résumé

BACKGROUND AND AIM: Technological advances in the field of biological imaging now allow multi-modal studies of human embryo anatomy. The aim of this study was to assess the high magnetic field muMRI feasibility in the study of small human embryos (less than 21mm crown-rump) as a new tool for the study of human descriptive embryology and to determine better sequence characteristics to obtain higher spatial resolution and higher signal/noise ratio. METHODS: Morphological study of four human embryos belonging to the historical collection of the Department of Anatomy in the Faculty of Medicine of Reims was undertaken by muMRI. These embryos had, successively, crown-rump lengths of 3mm (Carnegie Stage, CS 10), 12mm (CS 16), 17mm (CS 18) and 21mm (CS 20). Acquisition of images was performed using a vertical nuclear magnetic resonance spectrometer, a Bruker Avance III, 500MHz, 11.7T equipped for imaging. RESULTS: All images were acquired using 2D (transverse, sagittal and coronal) and 3D sequences, either T1-weighted or T2-weighted. Spatial resolution between 24 and 70mum/pixel allowed clear visualization of all anatomical structures of the embryos. CONCLUSION: The study of human embryos muMRI has already been reported in the literature and a few atlases exist for educational purposes. However, to our knowledge, descriptive or morphological studies of human developmental anatomy based on data collected these few muMRI studies of human embryos are rare. This morphological noninvasive imaging method coupled with other techniques already reported seems to offer new perspectives to descriptive studies of human embryology.

Référence

Ann Anat. 2014 Dec;196(6):402-9