» Articles » PMID: 32748143

Complex Method of CT and Morphological Examination of Placental Angioarchitechtonics

Overview
Publisher Springer
Specialty General Medicine
Date 2020 Aug 5
PMID 32748143
Citations 1
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

We propose an original method of complex assessment of the placental angioarchitechtonics based on computed tomography (CT) and morphological examination. A prerequisite condition of successful examination and assessment of the placental angioarchitechtonics is the pre-preparative stage including clearing of the placental and umbilical cord vessels from blood clots by placement of placenta into 10% hypertonic NaCl solution and then on a hygroscopic substrate. The major stage of this method is injection of contrast staining mixtures into the umbilical vessels followed by CT. The concentration of radiocontrast agent in water solution of gouache should be 70% for arteries and 15% for veins. The volumes of mixtures for contrast staining should be calculated according to the weight of the placenta. The contrast staining mixture was first injected into the catheterized unpaired umbilical vein, and then into both umbilical arteries. Each injection of the contrast staining mixture was visually inspected; then branching of the stained vessel was photographed and scanned by CT. The CT scans were used to construct 3D models of placental vessels and spectral color maps, which made it possible to examine the peculiarities of placental angioarchitechtonics, to identify and evaluate anastomoses of placental vessels, and to establish the type of these anastomoses.

Citing Articles

Cross-modal contrastive learning for unified placenta analysis using photographs.

Pan Y, Mehta M, Goldstein J, Ngonzi J, Bebell L, Roberts D Patterns (N Y). 2025; 5(12):101097.

PMID: 39776848 PMC: 11701861. DOI: 10.1016/j.patter.2024.101097.


The Role and Place of Thanatoradiological Studies in the Pathological Examination of Fetuses and Newborns.

Tumanova U, Shchegolev A Bull Exp Biol Med. 2022; 173(6):691-705.

PMID: 36329333 DOI: 10.1007/s10517-022-05615-y.