5 research outputs found

    Non-invasive measurement of biochemical profiles in the healthy fetal brain

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    © 2020 The Author(s) Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H-MRS) of the fetal brain can be used to study emerging metabolite profiles in the developing brain. Identifying early deviations in brain metabolic profiles in high-risk fetuses may offer important adjunct clinical information to improve surveillance and management during pregnancy. Objective: To investigate the normative trajectory of the fetal brain metabolites during the second half of gestation, and to determine the impact of using different Cramer-Rao Lower Bounds (CRLB) threshold on metabolite measurements using magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Study design: We prospectively enrolled 219 pregnant women with normal fetal ultrasound and biometric measures. We performed a total of 331 fetal 1H-MRS studies with gestational age in the rage of 18–39 weeks with 112 of the enrolled participants scanned twice. All the spectra in this study were acquired on a GE 1.5 T scanner using long echo-time of 144 ​ms and analyzed in LCModel. Results: We successfully acquired and analyzed fetal 1H-MRS with a success rate of 93%. We observed increases in total NAA, total creatine, total choline, scyllo inositol and total NAA-to-total choline ratio with advancing GA. Our results also showed faster increases in total NAA and total NAA-to-total choline ratio during the third trimester compared to the second trimester. We also observed faster increases in total choline and total NAA in female fetuses. Increasing the Cramer-Rao lower bounds threshold progressively from 100% to 40%–20% increased the mean metabolite concentrations and decreased the number of observations available for analysis. Conclusion: We report serial fetal brain biochemical profiles in a large cohort of health fetuses studied twice in gestation with a high success rate in the second and third trimester of pregnancy. We present normative in-vivo fetal brain metabolite trajectories over a 21-week gestational period which can be used to non-invasively measure and monitor brain biochemistry in the healthy and high-risk fetus

    In Utero MRI Identifies Impaired Second Trimester Subplate Growth in Fetuses with Congenital Heart Disease.

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    The subplate is a transient brain structure which plays a key role in the maturation of the cerebral cortex. Altered brain growth and cortical development have been suggested in fetuses with complex congenital heart disease (CHD) in the third trimester. However, at an earlier gestation, the putative role of the subplate in altered brain development in CHD fetuses is poorly understood. This study aims to examine subplate growth (i.e., volume and thickness) and its relationship to cortical sulcal development in CHD fetuses compared with healthy fetuses by using 3D reconstructed fetal magnetic resonance imaging. We studied 260 fetuses, including 100 CHD fetuses (22.3-32 gestational weeks) and 160 healthy fetuses (19.6-31.9 gestational weeks). Compared with healthy fetuses, CHD fetuses had 1) decreased global and regional subplate volumes and 2) decreased subplate thickness in the right hemisphere overall, in frontal and temporal lobes, and insula. Compared with fetuses with two-ventricle CHD, those with single-ventricle CHD had reduced subplate volume and thickness in right occipital and temporal lobes. Finally, impaired subplate growth was associated with disturbances in cortical sulcal development in CHD fetuses. These findings suggested a potential mechanistic pathway and early biomarker for the third-trimester failure of brain development in fetuses with complex CHD.Significance statementOur findings provide an early biomarker for brain maturational failure in fetuses with congenital heart disease, which may guide the development of future prenatal interventions aimed at reducing neurological compromise of prenatal origin in this high-risk population
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