Abstract

CT-based quantitative analysis of any ossification center in the cranium has not previously been carried out due to the limited availability of human fetal material. Detailed morphometric data on the development of ossification centers in the human fetus may be useful in the early detection of congenital defects. Ossification disorders in the cranium are associated with either a delayed development of ossification centers or their mineralization. These aberrations may result in the formation of accessory skull bones that differ in shape and size, and the incidence of which may be misdiagnosed as, e.g., skull fractures. The study material comprised 37 human fetuses of both sexes (16♂, 21♀) aged 18–30 weeks. Using CT, digital image analysis software, 3D reconstruction and statistical methods, the linear, planar and spatial dimensions of the occipital squama ossification center were measured. The morphometric characteristics of the fused ossification center of the occipital squama show no right—left differences. In relation to gestational age, the ossification center of the occipital squama grows linearly in its right and left vertical diameters, logarithmically in its transverse diameters of both the interparietal and supraoccipital parts and projection surface area, and according to a quadratic function in its volume. The obtained numerical findings of the occipital squama ossification center may be considered age-specific references of relevance in both the estimation of gestational age and the diagnostic process of congenital defects.

Highlights

  • The ossification process in the cranium begins as early as at 6–7 weeks of the embryonic life from the templates of the occipital bone, which comprises the following five components: basilar part, two lateral parts, as well as lower supraoccipital and upper interparietal parts of the squama

  • The investigated fetuses could not suffer from growth retardation, as the correlation between the gestational age based on the crown–rump length (CRL) and that calculated by the last menstruation reached R = 0.98 (p < 0.001)

  • Mean values and standard deviations of the analyzed parameters of the occipital squama ossification centers in human fetuses at the analyzed gestational ages are presented in Tables 3 and 4 for the vertical and transverse diameters of the interparietal and supraoccipital parts, projection surface area and volume

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Summary

Introduction

The ossification process in the cranium begins as early as at 6–7 weeks of the embryonic life from the templates of the occipital bone, which comprises the following five components: basilar part, two lateral parts, as well as lower supraoccipital and upper interparietal parts of the squama. Ossification in the cranium is the last and most complex stage of development. Cranial bones develop within both the chondrocranium and the membranous cranium. Except for the upper part of its squama, the occipital bone develops from the primary.

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