Abstract

Assessment of fetal adipose tissue gives information about the future metabolic health of an individual, with evidence that the development of this tissue has regional heterogeneity. To assess differences in the proton density fat fraction (PDFF) between fetal adipose tissue compartments in the third trimester using water-fat magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Water-fat MRI was performed in a 1.5-T scanner. Fetal adipose tissue was segmented into cheeks, thorax, abdomen, upper arms, forearms, thighs and lower legs. PDFF and R2* values were measured in each compartment. Twenty-eight women with singleton pregnancies were imaged between 28 and 38weeks of gestation. At 30weeks' gestation (n=22), the PDFF was statistically different between the compartments (P<0.0001), with the highest PDFF in cheeks, followed by upper arms, thorax, thighs, forearms, lower legs and abdomen. There were no statistical differences in the rate of PDFF change with gestational age between the white adipose tissue compartments (P=0.97). Perirenal brown adipose tissue had a different PDFF and R2* compared to white adipose tissue, while the rate of R2* change did not significantly change with gestational age between white adipose tissue compartments (P=0.96). Fetal adipose tissue accumulates lipids at a similar rate in all white adipose tissue compartments. PDFF variances between the compartments suggest that accumulation begins at different gestational ages, starting with cheeks, followed by extremities, trunk and abdomen. Additionally, MRI was able to detect differences in the PDFF between fetal brown adipose tissue and white adipose tissue.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call