Clinical Radiology
Volume 61, Issue 8 , Pages 679-685, August 2006

Post-mortem MRI of the foetal spine and spinal cord

  • E. Widjaja

      Affiliations

    • Academic Section of Radiology
    • Corresponding Author InformationGuarantor and correspondent: E. Widjaja, Academic Unit of Radiology, University of Sheffield, Sheffield S10 2JF, UK. Tel.:+44 114 271 3584; fax: +44 114 271 1714.
  • ,
  • E.H. Whitby

      Affiliations

    • Academic Section of Radiology
  • ,
  • M. Cohen

      Affiliations

    • Department of Pathology, Sheffield Children's Hospital, Sheffield, UK
  • ,
  • M.N.J. Paley

      Affiliations

    • Academic Section of Radiology
  • ,
  • P.D. Griffiths

      Affiliations

    • Academic Section of Radiology

Received 20 November 2005; received in revised form 8 January 2006; accepted 11 January 2006.

Aims

To compare the findings of post-mortem magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the foetal spine with autopsy with a view to using post-mortem MRI as an alternative or adjunct to autopsy, particularly in foetal and neonatal cases.

Materials and Methods

The brains and spines of 41 foetuses, with a gestational age range of 14–41 weeks, underwent post-mortem MRI before autopsy. Post-mortem MRI of the brain consisted of T2-weighted sequences in three orthogonal planes and MRI of the spine consisted of T2-weighted sequence in the sagittal and axial planes in all cases and coronal planes in selected cases.

Results

Thirty of 41 (78%) foetal spines were found to be normal at autopsy and on post-mortem MRI. Eleven of 41 (22%) foetal spines were abnormal: eight foetuses had myelomeningocoeles and Chiari 2 deformities, one foetus had limited dorsal myeloschisis, one foetus had caudal regression syndrome, and one had diastematomyelia. The post-mortem MRI findings concurred with the autopsy findings in 10/11 of the abnormal cases, the disagreement being the case of diastematomyelia that was shown on post-mortem MRI but was not diagnosed at autopsy.

Conclusions

In this series, post-mortem MRI findings agreed with the autopsy findings in 40/41(98%) cases and in one case the post-mortem MRI demonstrated an abnormality not demonstrated at autopsy.

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PII: S0009-9260(06)00096-1

doi:10.1016/j.crad.2006.01.016

Clinical Radiology
Volume 61, Issue 8 , Pages 679-685, August 2006