cepia

Clinical Epidemiology and Ageing

Developmental patterns of fetal fat and corresponding signal on T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging.

Blondiaux E, Chougar L, Gelot A, Valence S, Audureau E, le Pointe HDucou, Jouannic J-M, Dhombres F, Garel C Pediatr Radiol. 2018;48(3):317-324.

<p><b>BACKGROUND: </b>Evaluation of subcutaneous fetal fat layer thickness on T1-weighted sequences can be used to predict birth weight. Little is known about normal MR signal patterns of subcutaneous tissue throughout pregnancy.</p><p><b>OBJECTIVE: </b>To establish developmental patterns of subcutaneous fetal fat signal on T1-weighted sequences during the 2nd and 3rd trimesters.</p><p><b>MATERIALS AND METHODS: </b>We retrospectively examined T1-weighted images of 110 fetal MRI scans. We measured signal intensity of subcutaneous fat on thighs, buttocks, trunk, nuchal region, chin and scalp. We then calculated the ratios of the obtained values with fetal muscle, amnios and maternal fat signal, and compared the results with those of immunohistochemical examination of adipose tissue extracted from the abdominal wall of fetuses as part of standard autopsy protocol.</p><p><b>RESULTS: </b>We included 60 MRI scans in fetuses without intra-uterine growth restriction or macrosomia of non-diabetic mothers (range 23-37 weeks of gestation). Fat T1 intensity of all anatomical regions was low in all fetuses before 26 weeks of gestation. It became more hyperintense with increasing gestational age, in the following order: chin and nuchal region, then buttocks, thighs and trunk, and eventually the scalp at 33 weeks of gestation. After 33 weeks of gestation, all fetal subcutaneous tissues demonstrated overall hyperintense signal. This progression followed the conversion at immunohistochemistry of fetal adipose tissue composition from predominant brown to white adipose cells in 19 fetuses (19-41 weeks of gestation).</p><p><b>CONCLUSION: </b>Between 26 weeks and 33 weeks of gestation, subcutaneous fetal fat signal changed in an orderly pattern from chin to buttocks and scalp. This may reflect the conversion from predominant brown to white adipose tissues in subcutaneous fetal fat.</p>

MeSH terms: Birth Weight; Female; Fetus; Gestational Age; Humans; Infant, Newborn; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Pregnancy; Pregnancy Trimester, Second; Pregnancy Trimester, Third; Retrospective Studies; Subcutaneous Fat
DOI: 10.1007/s00247-017-4038-z