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T2* Placental Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Preterm Preeclampsia: An Observational Cohort Study.

Alison Ho, Jana Hutter, Laurence H. Jackson, Paul T. Seed, Laura McCabe, Mudher Al‐Adnani, Andreas Marnerides, Simi George, Lisa Story, Joseph V. Hajnal, Mary Rutherford, Lucy C. Chappell

2020PubMed76 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

test, t=7.49) correlating with a reduction in maternal PlGF (placental growth factor) concentrations (Spearman rank correlation coefficient 0.76) and increased lacunarity values (t=3.26). Median mean T2* reduced from 67 ms (IQR, 54-73) at 26.0 to 29.8 weeks' gestation to 38 ms (IQR, 28-40) at 34.0 to 37.9 weeks' gestation in the control group. In women with preeclampsia, median T2* was 23 ms (IQR, 20-23) at 26.0 to 29.8 weeks' gestation and remained low (22 ms [IQR, 20-26] at 34.0-37.8 weeks' gestation). Histological features of maternal vascular malperfusion were only found in placentae from women with preeclampsia. Placental volume did not differ between the control group and women with preeclampsia. Placental magnetic resonance imaging allows both objective quantification of placental function in vivo and elucidation of the complex mechanisms underlying preeclampsia development.

Topics & Concepts

PreeclampsiaGestationMedicineInterquartile rangeGestational agePregnancyMagnetic resonance imagingPlacentaObstetricsIntervillous spaceInternal medicineFetusRadiologyBiologyGeneticsPregnancy and preeclampsia studiesPrenatal Screening and DiagnosticsFetal and Pediatric Neurological Disorders