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Rhythmic electrical events, termed slow waves, govern the timing and amplitude of phasic contractions of the gastric musculature. Extracellular multielectrode measurement of gastric slow waves can be a biomarker for phenotypes of motility dysfunction. However, a gastric slow-wave conduction pathway for the rat, a common animal model, is unestablished. In this study, the validity of extracellular recording was demonstrated in vitro with simultaneous intracellular and extracellular recordings and by pharmacological inhibition of slow waves. The conduction pathway was determined by in vivo extracellular recordings while considering the effect of motion. Slow-wave characteristics [means (SD)] varied regionally having higher amplitude in the antrum than the distal corpus [1.03 (0.12) mV vs. 0.75 (0.31) mV; n = 7; P = 0.025 paired t test] and faster propagation near the greater curvature than the lesser curvature [1.00 (0.14) mm·s-1 vs. 0.74 (0.14) mm·s-1; n = 9 GC, 7 LC; P = 0.003 unpaired t test]. Notably, in some subjects, separate wavefronts propagated near the lesser and greater curvatures with a loosely coupled region occurring in the area near the distal corpus midline at the interface of the two wavefronts. This region had either the greater or lesser curvature wavefront propagating through it in a time-varying manner. The conduction pattern suggests that slow waves in the rat stomach form annular wavefronts in the antrum and not the corpus. This study has implications for interpretation of the relationship between slow waves, the interstitial cells of Cajal network structure, smooth muscles, and gastric motility.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Mapping of rat gastric slow waves showed regional variations in their organization. In some subjects, separate wavefronts propagated near the lesser and greater curvatures with a loosely coupled region near the midline, between the wavefronts, having a varying slow-wave origin. Furthermore, simultaneous intracellular and extracellular recordings were concordant and independent of movement artifacts, indicating that extracellular recordings can be interpreted in terms of their intracellular counterparts when intracellular recording is not possible.
Assuntos
Motilidade Gastrointestinal , Músculo Liso , Ratos Sprague-Dawley , Estômago , Animais , Estômago/fisiologia , Ratos , Motilidade Gastrointestinal/fisiologia , Masculino , Músculo Liso/fisiologia , Contração Muscular/fisiologia , Antro Pilórico/fisiologia , Células Intersticiais de Cajal/fisiologiaRESUMO
Contractions of the uterus play an important role in menstruation and fertility, and contractile dysfunction can lead to chronic diseases such as endometriosis. However, the structure and function of the uterus are difficult to interrogate in humans, and thus animal studies are often employed to understand its function. In rats, anatomical studies of the uterus have typically been based on histological assessment, have been limited to small segments of the uterine structure, and have been time-consuming to reconstruct at the organ scale. This study used micro-computed tomography imaging to visualise the muscle structures in the entire non-pregnant rat uterus and assess its use for 3D virtual histology. An assessment of the rodent uterus is presented to (i) quantify muscle thickness variations along the horns, (ii) identify predominant fibre orientations of the muscles and (iii) demonstrate how the anatomy of the uterus can be mapped to 3D volumetric meshes via virtual histology. Micro-computed tomography measurements were validated against measurements from histological sections. The average thickness of the myometrium was found to be 0.33 ± 0.11 mm and 0.31 ± 0.09 mm in the left and right horns, respectively. The micro-computed tomography and histology thickness calculations were found to correlate strongly at different locations in the uterus: at the cervix, r = 0.87, and along the horn from the cervical end to the ovarian end, respectively, r = 0.77, r = 0.89 and r = 0.54, with p < 0.001 in every location. This study shows that micro-computed tomography can be used to quantify the musculature in the whole non-pregnant uterus and can be used for 3D virtual histology.
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Placental insufficiency is one of the major causes of fetal growth restriction (FGR), a significant pregnancy disorder in which the fetus fails to achieve its full growth potential in utero. As well as the acute consequences of being born too small, affected offspring are at increased risk of cardiovascular disease, diabetes and other chronic diseases in later life. The placenta and heart develop concurrently, therefore placental maldevelopment and function in FGR may have profound effect on the growth and differentiation of many organ systems, including the heart. Hence, understanding the key molecular players that are synergistically linked in the development of the placenta and heart is critical. This review highlights the key growth factors, angiogenic molecules and transcription factors that are common causes of defective placental and cardiovascular development.
Assuntos
Retardo do Crescimento Fetal , Placenta , Humanos , Retardo do Crescimento Fetal/metabolismo , Retardo do Crescimento Fetal/fisiopatologia , Gravidez , Feminino , Placenta/metabolismo , Insuficiência Placentária/metabolismo , Insuficiência Placentária/fisiopatologia , Animais , Sistema Cardiovascular/metabolismo , Sistema Cardiovascular/embriologia , Sistema Cardiovascular/fisiopatologia , Sistema Cardiovascular/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Peptídeos e Proteínas de Sinalização Intercelular/metabolismoRESUMO
Multi-scale mathematical bioelectrical models of organs such as the uterus, stomach or heart present challenges both for accuracy and computational tractability. These multi-scale models are typically founded on models of biological cells derived from the classic Hodkgin-Huxley (HH) formalism. Ion channel behaviour is tracked with dynamical variables representing activation or inactivation of currents that relax to steady-state dependencies on cellular membrane voltage. Timescales for relaxation may be orders of magnitude faster than companion ion channel variables or phenomena of physiological interest for the entire cell (such as bursting sequences of action potentials) or the entire organ (such as electromechanical coordination). Exploiting these time scales with steady-state approximations for relatively fast-acting systems is a well-known but often overlooked approach as evidenced by recent published models. We thus investigate feasibility of an extensive reduction of order for an HH-type cell model with steady-state approximations to the full dynamical activation and inactivation ion channel variables. Our effort utilises a published comprehensive uterine smooth muscle cell model that encompasses 19 ordinary differential equations and 105 formulations overall. The numerous ion channel submodels in the published model exhibit relaxation times ranging from order 10-1 to 105 milliseconds. Substitution of the faster dynamic variables with steady-state formulations demonstrates both an accurate reproduction of the full model and substantial improvements in time-to-solve, for test cases performed. Our demonstration here of an effective and relatively straightforward reduction method underlines the particular importance of considering time scales for model simplification before embarking on large-scale computations or parameter sweeps. As a preliminary complement to more intensive reduction of order methods such as parameter sensitivity and bifurcation analysis, this approach can rapidly and accurately improve computational tractability for challenging multi-scale organ modelling efforts.
Assuntos
Coração , Células de Reed-Sternberg , Feminino , Humanos , Potenciais de Ação , Membrana Celular , Miócitos de Músculo LisoRESUMO
Fetal growth restriction (FGR) and maternal supine going-to-sleep position are both risk factors for late stillbirth. This study aimed to use magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to quantify the effect of maternal supine position on maternal-placental and fetoplacental blood flow, placental oxygen transfer and fetal oxygenation in FGR and healthy pregnancies. Twelve women with FGR and 27 women with healthy pregnancies at 34-38 weeks' gestation underwent MRI in both left lateral and supine positions. Phase-contrast MRI and a functional MRI technique (DECIDE) were used to measure blood flow in the maternal internal iliac arteries (IIAs) and umbilical vein (UV), placental oxygen transfer (placental flux), fetal oxygen saturation (FO2 ), and fetal oxygen delivery (delivery flux). The presence of FGR, compared to healthy pregnancies, was associated with a 7.8% lower FO2 (P = 0.02), reduced placental flux, and reduced delivery flux. Maternal supine positioning caused a 3.8% reduction in FO2 (P = 0.001), and significant reductions in total IIA flow, placental flux, UV flow and delivery flux compared to maternal left lateral position. The effect of maternal supine position on fetal oxygen delivery was independent of FGR pregnancy, meaning that supine positioning has an additive effect of reducing fetal oxygenation further in women with FGR, compared to women with appropriately grown for age pregnancies. Meanwhile, the effect of maternal supine positioning on placental oxygen transfer was not independent of the effect of FGR. Therefore, growth-restricted fetuses, which are chronically hypoxaemic, experience a relatively greater decline in oxygen transfer when mothers lie supine in late gestation compared to appropriately growing fetuses. KEY POINTS: Fetal growth restriction (FGR) is the most common risk factor associated with stillbirth, and early recognition and timely delivery is vital to reduce this risk. Maternal supine going-to-sleep position is found to increase the risk of late stillbirth but when combined with having a FGR pregnancy, maternal supine position leads to 15 times greater odds of stillbirth compared to supine sleeping with appropriately grown for age (AGA) pregnancies. Using MRI, this study quantifies the chronic hypoxaemia experienced by growth-restricted fetuses due to 13.5% lower placental oxygen transfer and 26% lower fetal oxygen delivery compared to AGA fetuses. With maternal supine positioning, there is a 23% reduction in maternal-placental blood flow and a further 14% reduction in fetal oxygen delivery for both FGR and AGA pregnancies, but this effect is proportionally greater for growth-restricted fetuses. This knowledge emphasises the importance of avoiding supine positioning in late pregnancy, particularly for vulnerable FGR pregnancies.
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Placenta , Circulação Placentária , Gravidez , Feminino , Humanos , Placenta/diagnóstico por imagem , Placenta/irrigação sanguínea , Retardo do Crescimento Fetal/diagnóstico por imagem , Natimorto , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , OxigênioRESUMO
`The entire maternal circulation adapts to pregnancy, and this adaption is particularly extensive in the uterine circulation where the major vessels double in size to facilitate an approximately 15-fold increase in blood supply to this organ over the course of pregnancy. Several factors may play a role in both the remodeling and biomechanical function of the uterine vasculature including the paracrine microenvironment, passive properties of the vessel wall, and active components of vascular function (incorporating the myogenic response and response to shear stress induced by intravascular blood flow). However, the interplay between these factors and how this plays out in an organ-specific manner to induce the extent of remodeling observed in the uterus is not well understood. Here we present an integrated assessment of the uterine radial arteries, likely rate limiters to the flow of oxygenated maternal blood to the placental surface, via computational modeling and pressure myography. We show that uterine radial arteries behave differently to other systemic vessels (higher compliance and shear-mediated constriction) and that their properties change with the adaptation to pregnancy (higher myogenic tone, higher compliance, and ability to tolerate higher flow rates before constricting). Together, this provides a useful tool to improve our understanding of the role of uterine vascular adaptation in normal and abnormal pregnancies and highlights the need for vascular bed-specific investigations of vascular function in health and disease.NEW & NOTEWORTHY To our knowledge, this is the first data-driven computational model of autoregulation of uterine radial arteries, likely rate limiters of maternal blood flow to the placenta. The study demonstrates that uterine radial arteries behave differently from systemic vessels (higher compliance, shear-mediated constriction) and change in pregnancy (higher myogenic tone, higher compliance, tolerance of higher flow rates). This pregnancy-specific mathematical model of vascular reactivity allows interrogation of the functional significance of incomplete vascular adaption in pathology.
Assuntos
Placenta , Artéria Radial , Feminino , Humanos , Placenta/irrigação sanguínea , Circulação Placentária , Gravidez , Artéria Uterina/fisiologia , Útero/irrigação sanguíneaRESUMO
The thoracic duct (TD) drains most of the body's lymph back to the venous system via its lymphovenous junction (LVJ), playing a pivotal role in fluid homeostasis, fat absorption and the systemic immune response. The respiratory cycle is thought to assist with lymph flow, but the precise mechanism underpinning terminal TD lymph flow into the central veins is not well understood. The aim of this study was to use ultrasonography (US) to explore the relationship between terminal TD lymph flow, the respiratory cycle, and gravity. The left supraclavicular fossa was scanned in healthy non-fasted volunteers using high-resolution (13-5 MHz) US to identify the terminal TD and the presence of a lymphovenous valve (LVV). The TD's internal diameter was measured in relation to respiration (inspiration vs. expiration) and body positioning (supine vs. Trendelenburg). The terminal TD was visualized in 20/33 (61%) healthy volunteers. An LVV was visualized in only 4/20 (20%) cases. The mean terminal TD diameter in the supine position was 1.7 mm (range 0.8-3.1 mm); this increased in full inspiration (mean 1.8 mm, range 0.9-3.2 mm, p < 0.05), and in the Trendelenburg position (mean 1.8 mm, range 1.2-3.1 mm, p < 0.05). The smallest mean terminal TD diameter occurred in full expiration (1.6 mm, range 0.7-3.1 mm, p < 0.05). Respiration and gravity impact the terminal TD diameter. Due to the challenges of visualizing the TD and LVJ, other techniques such as dynamic magnetic resonance imaging will be required to fully understand the factors governing TD lymph flow.
Assuntos
Respiração , Ducto Torácico , Humanos , Decúbito Dorsal , Ducto Torácico/diagnóstico por imagem , UltrassonografiaRESUMO
KEY POINTS: Maternal supine sleep position in late pregnancy is associated with an increased risk of stillbirth. Maternal supine position in late pregnancy reduces maternal cardiac output and uterine blood flow. Using MRI, this study shows that compared to the left lateral position, maternal supine position in late pregnancy is associated with reduced utero-placental blood flow and oxygen transfer across the placenta with an average 6.2% reduction in oxygen delivery to the fetus and an average 11% reduction in fetal umbilical venous blood flow. ABSTRACT: Maternal sleep position in late gestation is associated with an increased risk of stillbirth, though the pathophysiological reasons for this are unclear. Studies using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) have shown that compared with lateral positions, lying supine causes a reduction in cardiac output, reduced abdominal aortic blood flow and reduced vena caval flow which is only partially compensated for by increased flow in the azygos venous system. Using functional MRI techniques, including an acquisition termed diffusion-relaxation combined imaging of the placenta (DECIDE), which combines diffusion weighted imaging and T2 relaxometry, blood flow and oxygen transfer were estimated in the maternal, fetal and placental compartments when subjects were scanned both supine and in left lateral positions. In late gestation pregnancy, lying supine caused a 23.7% (P < 0.0001) reduction in total internal iliac arterial blood flow to the uterus. In addition, lying in the supine position caused a 6.2% (P = 0.038) reduction in oxygen movement across the placenta. The reductions in oxygen transfer to the fetus, termed delivery flux, of 11.2% (P = 0.0597) and in fetal oxygen saturation of 4.4% (P = 0.0793) did not reach statistical significance. It is concluded that even in healthy late gestation pregnancy, maternal position significantly affects oxygen transfer across the placenta and may in part provide an explanation for late stillbirth in vulnerable fetuses.
Assuntos
Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Circulação Placentária , Feminino , Feto/diagnóstico por imagem , Hemodinâmica , Humanos , Placenta/diagnóstico por imagem , Gravidez , Terceiro Trimestre da GravidezRESUMO
STUDY QUESTION: What is the physiological extent of vascular remodelling in and trophoblast plugging of the uterine circulation across the first half of pregnancy? SUMMARY ANSWER: All levels of the uterine vascular tree (arcuate, radial and spiral arteries (SAs)) dilate â¼2.6- to 4.3-fold between 6 and 20 weeks of gestation, with significant aggregates of trophoblasts persisting in the decidual and myometrial parts of SAs beyond the first trimester. WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADY: In early pregnancy, endovascular trophoblasts form 'plugs' in the SAs, transiently inhibiting blood flow to the placenta, whilst concurrently the uterine vasculature undergoes significant adaption to facilitate increased blood delivery to the placenta later in gestation. These processes are impaired in pregnancy disorders, but quantitative understanding of the anatomical changes even in normal pregnancy is poor. STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION: Serial sections of normal placentae in situ (n = 22) of 6.1-20.5 weeks of gestation from the Boyd collection and Dixon collection (University of Cambridge, UK) were digitalized using a slide scanner or Axio Imager.A1 microscope. PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS: Spiral (n = 45), radial (n = 40) and arcuate (n = 39) arteries were manually segmented. Using custom-written scripts for Matlab® software, artery dimensions (Feret diameters; major axes; luminal/wall area) and endovascular trophoblast plug/aggregate (n = 24) porosities were calculated. Diameters of junctional zone SAs within the myometrium (n = 35) were acquired separately using a micrometre and light microscope. Decidual thickness and trophoblast plug depth was measured using ImageJ. MAIN RESULTS AND THE ROLE OF CHANCE: By all measures, radial and arcuate artery dimensions progressively increased from 6.1 to 20.5 weeks (P < 0.01). The greatest increase in SA calibre occurred after 12 weeks of gestation. Trophoblast aggregates were found to persist within decidual and myometrial parts of SA lumens beyond the first trimester, and up to 18.5 weeks of gestation, although those present in the second trimester did not appear to prevent the passage of red blood cells to the intervillous space. Trophoblasts forming these aggregates became more compact (decreased in porosity) over gestation, whilst channel size between cells increased (P = 0.01). Decidual thickness decreased linearly over gestation (P = 0.0003), meaning plugs occupied an increasing proportion of the decidua (P = 0.02). LARGE SCALE DATA: N/A. LIMITATIONS, REASONS FOR CAUTION: Although serial sections were assessed, two-dimensional images cannot completely reflect the three-dimensional properties and connectivity of vessels and plugs/aggregates. Immersion-fixation of the specimens means that vessel size may be under-estimated. WIDER IMPLICATIONS OF THE FINDINGS: Uterine vascular remodelling and trophoblast plug dispersion is a progressive phenomenon that is not completed by the end of the first trimester. Our quantitative findings support the concept that radial arteries present a major site of resistance until mid-gestation. Their dimensional increase at 10-12 weeks of gestation may explain the rapid increase in blood flow to the placenta observed by others at â¼13 weeks. Measured properties of trophoblast plugs suggest that they will impact on the resistance, shear stress and nature of blood flow within the utero-placental vasculature until mid-gestation. The presence of channels within plugs will likely lead to high velocity flow streams and thus increase shear stress experienced by the trophoblasts forming the aggregates. Quantitative understanding of utero-placental vascular adaptation gained here will improve in silico modelling of utero-placental haemodynamics and provide new insights into pregnancy disorders, such as fetal growth restriction. STUDY FUNDING/COMPETING INTEREST(S): This work was supported by a Royal Society Te Aparangi Marsden Grant [18-UOA-135]. A.R.C. is supported by a Rutherford Discovery Fellowship [14-UOA-019]. The authors have no conflict of interest to declare.
Assuntos
Circulação Placentária , Trofoblastos , Decídua , Feminino , Humanos , Placenta , Gravidez , Primeiro Trimestre da Gravidez , Remodelação VascularRESUMO
A well-functioning placenta is critical for healthy fetal development, as the placenta brings fetal blood in close contact with nutrient rich maternal blood, enabling exchange of nutrients and waste between mother and fetus. The feto-placental circulation forms a complex branching structure, providing blood to fetal capillaries, which must receive sufficient blood flow to ensure effective exchange, but at a low enough pressure to prevent damage to placental circulatory structures. The branching structure of the feto-placental circulation is known to be altered in complications such as fetal growth restriction, and the presence of regions of vascular dysfunction (such as hypovascularity or thrombosis) are proposed to elevate risk of placental pathology. Here we present a methodology to combine micro-computed tomography and computational model-based analysis of the branching structure of the feto-placental circulation in ex vivo placentae from normal term pregnancies. We analyse how vascular structure relates to function in this key organ of pregnancy; demonstrating that there is a 'resilience' to placental vascular structure-function relationships. We find that placentae with variable chorionic vascular structures, both with and without a Hyrtl's anastomosis between the umbilical arteries, and those with multiple regions of poorly vascularised tissue are able to function with a normal vascular resistance. Our models also predict that by progressively introducing local heterogeneity in placental vascular structure, large increases in feto-placental vascular resistances are induced. This suggests that localised heterogeneities in placental structure could potentially provide an indicator of increased risk of placental dysfunction.
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Placenta , Circulação Placentária , Simulação por Computador , Feminino , Humanos , Placenta/diagnóstico por imagem , Gravidez , Relação Estrutura-Atividade , Microtomografia por Raio-XRESUMO
Non-cystic fibrosis bronchiectasis is increasingly described in the paediatric population. While diagnosis is by high-resolution chest computed tomography (CT), chest X-rays (CXRs) remain a first-line investigation. CXRs are currently insensitive in their detection of bronchiectasis. We aim to determine if quantitative digital analysis allows CT features of bronchiectasis to be detected in contemporaneously taken CXRs. Regions of radiologically (A) normal, (B) severe bronchiectasis, (C) mild airway dilation and (D) other parenchymal abnormalities were identified in CT and mapped to corresponding CXR. An artificial neural network (ANN) algorithm was used to characterise regions of classes A, B, C and D. The algorithm was then tested in 13 subjects and compared to CT scan features. Structural changes in CT were reflected in CXR, including mild airway dilation. The areas under the receiver operator curve for ANN feature detection were 0.74 (class A), 0.71 (class B), 0.76 (class C) and 0.86 (class D). CXR analysis identified CT measures of abnormality with a better correlation than standard radiological scoring at the 99% confidence level.Conclusion: Regional abnormalities can be detected by digital analysis of CXR, which may provide a low-cost and readily available tool to indicate the need for diagnostic CT and for ongoing disease monitoring. What is Known: ⢠Bronchiectasis is a severe chronic respiratory disorder increasingly recognised in paediatric populations. ⢠Diagnostic computed tomography imaging is often requested only after several chest X-ray investigations. What is New: ⢠We show that a digital analysis of chest X-ray could provide more accurate identification of bronchiectasis features.
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Bronquiectasia , Algoritmos , Bronquiectasia/diagnóstico por imagem , Criança , Humanos , Tórax , Tomografia Computadorizada por Raios X , Raios XRESUMO
Despite a huge range in lung size between species, there is little measured difference in the ability of the lung to provide a well-matched air flow (ventilation) to blood flow (perfusion) at the gas exchange tissue. Here, we consider the remarkable similarities in ventilation/perfusion matching between species through a biophysical lens and consider evidence that matching in large animals is dominated by gravity but in small animals by structure.
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Pulmão/fisiologia , Animais , Gravitação , Humanos , Camundongos , Fenômenos Fisiológicos/fisiologia , Fluxo Sanguíneo Regional/fisiologia , RespiraçãoRESUMO
The utero-placental circulation links the maternal and fetal circulations during pregnancy, ensuring adequate gas and nutrient exchange, and consequently fetal growth. However, our understanding of this circulatory system remains incomplete. Here, we discuss how the utero-placental circulation is established, how it changes dynamically during pregnancy, and how this may impact on pregnancy success, highlighting how we may address knowledge gaps through advances in imaging and computational modeling approaches.
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Circulação Placentária , Gravidez , Animais , Feminino , Desenvolvimento Fetal , Humanos , Ciclo Menstrual , Placenta/irrigação sanguínea , Placenta/fisiologia , Útero/irrigação sanguínea , Útero/fisiologiaRESUMO
STUDY QUESTION: How does trophoblast plugging impact utero-placental haemodynamics? SUMMARY ANSWER: Physiological trophoblast plug structures are dense enough to restrict flow of oxygenated blood to the intervillous space (IVS) in the first trimester, and result in a shear stress environment upstream of the plugs that promotes spiral artery remodelling. WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADY: Trophoblast plugging of the uterine spiral arteries is thought to be the dominant factor restricting the flow of oxygenated maternal blood to the placenta in the first trimester of pregnancy. However, the extent of plugging, the timing of plug break up, and the impact of plug structure on pregnancy outcomes is debated. STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION: A computational model of the uterine radial and spiral arteries, incorporating arteriovenous anastomoses was developed. The model was parameterized with our own histological data and previous literature descriptions of the dimensions of the spiral arteries, and the structural properties (porosity) of trophoblast plugs. PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS: Structural data were acquired from the literature, and supplemented by images of the spiral arteries acquired by standard thin-section 2D immunohistochemistry, and whole mount immunohistochemistry imaged in 3D by micro-CT. Computational models were solved using Matlab software, via custom written scripts. MAIN RESULTS AND THE ROLE OF CHANCE: We confirm that physiological lengths (>0.1 mm) and porosities (0.2-0.6) of trophoblast plugs are sufficient to restrict the flow of oxygenated maternal blood flow to the placental surface. Trophoblast plugs also have important haemodynamic consequences upstream in the spiral arteries by generating shear stress conditions of <2 dyne/cm2 that promote trophoblast-induced spiral artery remodelling. Structural changes in plugs as they dislodge are likely to result in rapid increases in blood flow to the IVS, and it is likely at this stage of gestation that the major source of resistance in the utero-placental circulation transitions from the spiral arteries to the radial arteries, which then act as a the 'rate-limiting' step to IVS flow. LIMITATIONS, REASONS FOR CAUTION: Structural descriptions of the spiral arteries, radial arteries and trophoblast plugs largely rely on 2D histological sections, or historical measurements. Increased focus on quantitatively assessing the 3D structure of the uterine arteries using more modern imaging technologies in the future will strengthen model predictions. WIDER IMPLICATIONS OF THE FINDINGS: Our work suggests that trophoblast plugs play a previously under-appreciated role in regulating spiral artery remodelling in the first trimester of human pregnancy. This creates the possibility that inadequate trophoblast plugging in the first trimester may contribute to the inadequate artery remodelling observed in pregnancy pathologies such as pre-eclampsia. The incorporation of arteriovenous anastomoses in our model highlights the important influence that shunted blood can play in utero-placental haemodynamics, and together with the emerging role of radial arteries in regulating blood flow to the placenta, the influence of arteriovenous anastomoses on radial artery haemodynamics in normal and pathological pregnancies warrants further investigation. STUDY FUNDING/COMPETING INTEREST(S): This research was supported by a Royal Society of New Zealand Marsden Fund award (13-UOA-032). A.R.C. is supported by a Royal Society of New Zealand Rutherford Discovery Fellowship (14-UOA-019). R.S. was supported by a Gravida (National Centre for Growth and Development) postgraduate scholarship. The authors have no conflicts of interest. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: N/A.
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Hemodinâmica , Modelos Cardiovasculares , Modelagem Computacional Específica para o Paciente , Placenta/irrigação sanguínea , Circulação Placentária , Trofoblastos/fisiologia , Artéria Uterina/fisiologia , Remodelação Vascular , Permeabilidade Capilar , Angiografia por Tomografia Computadorizada , Feminino , Humanos , Oxigênio/sangue , Porosidade , Gravidez , Primeiro Trimestre da Gravidez , Fluxo Sanguíneo Regional , Artéria Uterina/diagnóstico por imagem , Microtomografia por Raio-XRESUMO
Spiral arteries (SAs) lie at the interface between the uterus and placenta, and supply nutrients to the placental surface. Maternal blood circulation is separated from the fetal circulation by structures called villous trees. SAs are transformed in early pregnancy from tightly coiled vessels to large high-capacity channels, which is believed to facilitate an increased maternal blood flow throughout pregnancy with minimal increase in velocity, preventing damage to delicate villous trees. Significant maternal blood flow velocities have been theorized in the space surrounding the villi (the intervillous space, IVS), particularly when SA conversion is inadequate, but have only recently been visualized reliably using pulsed wave Doppler ultrasonography. Here, we present a computational model of blood flow from SA openings, allowing prediction of IVS properties based on jet length. We show that jets of flow observed by ultrasound are likely correlated with increased IVS porosity near the SA mouth and propose that observed mega-jets (flow penetrating more than half the placental thickness) are only possible when SAs open to regions of the placenta with very sparse villous structures. We postulate that IVS tissue density must decrease at the SA mouth through gestation, supporting the hypothesis that blood flow from SAs influences villous tree development.
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Circulação Sanguínea , Vilosidades Coriônicas/irrigação sanguínea , Modelos Biológicos , Artérias/fisiologia , Vilosidades Coriônicas/metabolismo , Feminino , Humanos , Hidrodinâmica , Mães , GravidezRESUMO
The placenta is critical to fetal health during pregnancy as it supplies oxygen and nutrients to maintain life. It has a complex structure, and alterations to this structure across spatial scales are associated with several pregnancy complications, including intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR). The relationship between placental structure and its efficiency as an oxygen exchanger is not well understood in normal or pathological pregnancies. Here we present a computational framework that predicts oxygen transport in the placenta which accounts for blood and oxygen transport in the space around a placental functional unit (the villous tree). The model includes the well-defined branching structure of the largest villous tree branches, as well as a smoothed representation of the small terminal villi that comprise the placenta's gas exchange interfaces. The model demonstrates that oxygen exchange is sensitive to villous tree geometry, including the villous branch length and volume, which are seen to change in IUGR. This is because, to be an efficient exchanger, the architecture of the villous tree must provide a balance between maximising the surface area available for exchange, and the opposing condition of allowing sufficient maternal blood flow to penetrate into the space surrounding the tree. The model also predicts an optimum oxygen exchange when the branch angle is 24 °, as villous branches and TBs are spread out sufficiently to channel maternal blood flow deep into the placental tissue for oxygen exchange without being shunted directly into the DVs. Without concurrent change in the branch length and angles, the model predicts that the number of branching generations has a small influence on oxygen exchange. The modelling framework is presented in 2D for simplicity but is extendible to 3D or to incorporate the high-resolution imaging data that is currently evolving to better quantify placental structure.
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Vilosidades Coriônicas/anatomia & histologia , Vilosidades Coriônicas/metabolismo , Troca Materno-Fetal/fisiologia , Oxigênio/metabolismo , Placenta/metabolismo , Animais , Vilosidades Coriônicas/irrigação sanguínea , Feminino , Humanos , Mamíferos , Modelos Biológicos , Placenta/anatomia & histologia , Placenta/irrigação sanguínea , GravidezRESUMO
Previous studies of the ex vivo lung have suggested significant intersubject variability in lung lobe geometry. A quantitative description of normal lung lobe shape would therefore have value in improving the discrimination between normal population variability in shape and pathology. To quantify normal human lobe shape variability, a principal component analysis (PCA) was performed on high resolution computed tomography (HRCT) imaging of the lung at full inspiration. Volumetric imaging from 22 never-smoking subjects (10 female and 12 male) with normal lung function was included in the analysis. For each subject, an initial finite element mesh geometry was generated from a group of manually selected nodes that were placed at distinct anatomical locations on the lung surface. Each mesh used cubic shape functions to describe the surface curvilinearity, and the mesh was fitted to surface data for each lobe. A PCA was performed on the surface meshes for each lobe. Nine principal components (PCs) were sufficient to capture >90% of the normal variation in each of the five lobes. The analysis shows that lobe size can explain between 20% and 50% of intersubject variability, depending on the lobe considered. Diaphragm shape was the next most significant intersubject difference. When the influence of lung size difference is removed, the angle of the fissures becomes the most significant shape difference, and the variability in relative lobe size becomes important. We also show how a lobe from an independent subject can be projected onto the study population's PCs, demonstrating potential for abnormalities in lobar geometry to be defined in a quantitative manner.
Assuntos
Processamento de Imagem Assistida por Computador/métodos , Pulmão/anatomia & histologia , Pulmão/diagnóstico por imagem , Tomografia Computadorizada por Raios X , Feminino , Voluntários Saudáveis , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Análise de Componente Principal , Reprodutibilidade dos TestesRESUMO
Power Doppler ultrasound (PD-US) is the ideal modality to assess tissue perfusion as it is cheap, patient-friendly and does not require ionizing radiation. However, meaningful inter-patient comparison only occurs if differences in tissue-attenuation are corrected for. This can be done by standardizing the PD-US signal to a blood vessel assumed to have 100% vascularity. The original method to do this is called fractional moving blood volume (FMBV). We describe a novel, fully-automated method combining image processing, numerical modelling, and deep learning to estimate three-dimensional single vessel fractional moving blood volume (3D-svFMBV). We map the PD signals to a characteristic intensity profile within a single large vessel to define the standardization value at the high shear vessel margins. This removes the need for mathematical correction for background signal which can introduce error. The 3D-svFMBV was first tested on synthetic images generated using the characteristics of uterine artery and physiological ultrasound noise levels, demonstrating prediction of standardization value close to the theoretical ideal. Clinical utility was explored using 143 first-trimester placental ultrasound volumes. More biologically plausible perfusion estimates were obtained, showing improved prediction of pre-eclampsia compared with those generated with the semi-automated original 3D-FMBV technique. The proposed 3D-svFMBV method overcomes the limitations of the original technique to provide accurate and robust placental perfusion estimation. This not only has the potential to provide an early pregnancy screening tool but may also be used to assess perfusion of different organs and tumors.
Assuntos
Volume Sanguíneo , Imageamento Tridimensional , Placenta , Humanos , Imageamento Tridimensional/métodos , Gravidez , Feminino , Volume Sanguíneo/fisiologia , Placenta/diagnóstico por imagem , Placenta/irrigação sanguínea , Ultrassonografia Pré-Natal/métodos , Aprendizado Profundo , Ultrassonografia Doppler/métodos , Primeiro Trimestre da GravidezRESUMO
Several experimental studies have found that females have higher deposition of particles in the airways compared with males. This has implications for the delivery of aerosolized therapeutics and for understanding sex differences in respiratory system response to environmental exposures. This study evaluates several factors that potentially contribute to sex differences in particle deposition, using scale-specific structure-function models of 1D ventilation distribution, particle transport, and deposition. The impact of gravity, inhalation flow rate, and dead space are evaluated in 12 structure-based models (seven female; five male). Females were found to have significantly higher total, bronchial, and alveolar deposition than males across a particle size range from 0.01 to 10 . Results suggest that higher deposition fraction in females is due to higher alveolar deposition for smaller particle sizes, and higher bronchial deposition for larger particles. Females had higher alveolar deposition in the lower lobes, and slightly lower particle concentration in the left upper lobe. Males were found to be more sensitive to changes due to gravity, showing greater reduction in bronchial deposition fraction. Males were also more sensitive to change in inhalation flow rate, and to scaling of dead space due to the larger male baseline airway size. Predictions of sex differences in particle deposition - that are consistent with the literature - suggest that sex-based characteristics of lung and airway size interacting with particle size gives rise to differences in regional deposition.
RESUMO
The uterus exhibits intermittent electrophysiological activity in vivo. Although most active during labor, the non-pregnant uterus can exhibit activity of comparable magnitude to the early stages of labor. In this study, two types of flexible electrodes were utilized to measure the electrical activity of uterine smooth muscle in vivo in anesthetized, non-pregnant rats. Flexible printed circuit electrodes were placed on the serosal surface of the uterine horn of six anesthetized rats. Electrical activity was recorded for a duration of 20-30 min. Activity contained two components: high frequency activity (bursts) and an underlying low frequency 'slow wave' which occurred concurrently. These components had dominant frequencies of 6.82 ± 0.63 Hz for the burst frequency and 0.032 ± 0.0055 Hz for the slow wave frequency. There was a mean burst occurrence rate of 0.76 ± 0.23 bursts per minute and mean burst duration of 20.1 ± 6.5 s. The use of multiple high-resolution electrodes enabled 2D mapping of the initiation and propagation of activity along the uterine horn. This in vivo approach has the potential to provide the organ level detail to help interpret non-invasive body surface recordings.