Morphogenesis and Three‐Dimensional Movement of the Stomach During the Human Embryonic Period |
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Authors: | N. Kaigai A. Nako S. Yamada C. Uwabe K. Kose T. Takakuwa |
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Affiliation: | 1. Human Health Science, Graduate School of Medicine, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan;2. Congenital Anomaly Research Center, Graduate School of Medicine, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan;3. Institute of Applied Physics, University of Tsukuba, Ibaragi, Japan |
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Abstract: | The stomach develops as the local widening of the foregut after Carnegie stage (CS) 13 that moves in a dramatic and dynamic manner during the embryonic period. Using the magnetic resonance images of 377 human embryos, we present the morphology, morphometry, and three‐dimensional movement of the stomach during CS16 and CS23. The stomach morphology revealed stage‐specific features. The angular incisura and the cardia were formed at CS18. The change in the angular incisura angle was approximately 90° during CS19 and CS20, and was <90° after CS 21. The prominent formations of the fundus and the pylorus differentiate at around CS20. Morphometry of the stomach revealed that the stomach gradually becomes “deflected” during development. The stomach may appear to move to the left laterally and caudally due to its deflection and differential growth. The track of the reference points in the stomach may reflect the visual three‐dimensional movement. The movement of point M, representing the movement of the greater curvature, was different from that of points C (cardia) and P (pyloric antrum). The P and C were located just around the midsagittal plane in all the stages observed. Point M moved in the caudal‐left lateral direction until CS22. Moreover, the vector CP does not rotate around the dorsoventral axis, as widely believed, but around the transverse axis. The plane CPM rotated mainly around the longitudinal axis. The data obtained will be useful for prenatal diagnosis in the near future. Microsc. Res. Tech, 297:791–797, 2014. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. |
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Keywords: | stomach human embryo magnetic resonance imaging three‐dimensional movement |
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