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Whole cervix imaging of collagen, muscle, and cellularity in term and preterm pregnancy

Wenjie Wu, Zhexian Sun, Hansong Gao, Nan Yuan, Stephanie Pizzella, Haonan Xu, Josephine Lau, Yiqi Lin, Hui Wang, Pamela K. Woodard, Hannah R. Krigman, Qing Wang, Yong Wang

2024Nature Communications15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cervical softening and dilation are critical for the successful term delivery of a fetus, with premature changes associated with preterm birth. Traditional clinical measures like transvaginal ultrasound and Bishop scores fall short in predicting preterm births and elucidating the cervix's complex microstructural changes. Here, we introduce a magnetic resonance diffusion basis spectrum imaging (DBSI) technique for non-invasive, comprehensive imaging of cervical cellularity, collagen, and muscle fibers. This method is validated through ex vivo DBSI and histological analyses of specimens from total hysterectomies. Subsequently, retrospective in vivo DBSI analysis at 32 weeks of gestation in ten term deliveries and seven preterm deliveries with inflammation-related conditions shows distinct microstructural differences between the groups, alongside significant correlations with delivery timing. These results highlight DBSI's potential to improve understanding of premature cervical remodeling and aid in the evaluation of therapeutic interventions for at-risk pregnancies. Future studies will further assess DBSI's clinical applicability.

Topics & Concepts

Cervical dilationMedicineCervixMagnetic resonance imagingPremature birthPregnancyPreterm laborCervical insufficiencyGestationObstetricsUltrasoundEx vivoFetusIn vivoRadiologyInternal medicineBiologyBiotechnologyCancerGeneticsPreterm Birth and ChorioamnionitisPelvic floor disorders treatmentsPregnancy-related medical research