4.5 Article

Placental MRI: Development of an MRI compatible ex vivo system for whole placenta dual perfusion

Journal

PLACENTA
Volume 101, Issue -, Pages 4-12

Publisher

W B SAUNDERS CO LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.placenta.2020.07.026

Keywords

Ex vivo; Placenta; MRI; Pathology; Angiography; Relaxometry

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [U01HD087211, R01EB017337, R01HD100009]

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Purpose: Placental dysfunction plays a key role in diseases that affect the fetus in utero and after birth. Aiming to develop a platform for validating in vivo placental MRI and investigations into placental physiology, we designed and built a prototype MRI-compatible perfusion chamber with an integrated MRI receive coil for high SNR ex vivo placental imaging. Principal results: After optimizing placenta vascular clearing and perfusion protocols, we performed contrast enhanced MR angiography and MR relaxometry on eight carefully selected placentas while they were perfused via the umbilical arteries (UAs). Additionally, two of these placentas underwent maternal perfusion via the intervillous space (IVS). Despite striving for homogenous perfusion across the whole placenta, imaging results were highly heterogeneous for both UA and IVS perfused placentas. By histology, we observed blood congestion in the villi in regions that showed low UA perfusion during MRI. In two placentas prominent chorionic arteries followed by adjacent veins underwent contrast enhancement in the absence of villous capillary blush. The single placenta from a pregnancy affected by IUGR had the most homogeneous villous capillary perfusion. Major conclusions: A dual perfusion system for ex vivo placentas compatible with MRI permitted assessment of UA and IVS placental perfusion. We observed spatial UA perfusion heterogeneity and evidence for arteriovenous shunting in placentas from normal pregnancies and deliveries, but relative villous capillary perfusion homogeneity in a single IUGR placenta. Future work will focus on system optimization, followed by physiological manipulation and validation of in vivo placental MRI.

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