Bulgarian Journal of Veterinary Medicine (Dec 2023)

MRI anatomical investigation of rabbit prostate gland

  • R. S. Dimitrov

DOI
https://doi.org/10.15547/bjvm.2434
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 4
pp. 483 – 495

Abstract

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The aim of the study was to provide diagnostic imaging data on rabbit prostate complex by means of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with regard to their use in morphological investigations of the gland. Six anaesthetised sexually mature clinically healthy New Zealand White rabbits, 8 months of age, with body weight 2.83.2 kg were used. The pelvic cavity and pelvic organs were investigated in the sagittal, dorsal and transversal planes from the 7th lumbar (L7) to the 1st coccygeal (C1) vertebra with 2-mm slice thickness using a Magnetom Essenza 1.5T tunnel MRI scanner. The prostate com-plex (proprostate, prostate and paraprostate parts) demonstrated signal hyperintensity on T1-weighted MRI images. The prostate capsule was hyperintense compared to glandular parenchyma. The prostate complex was visualised on slices between the caudal part of the first sacral and cranial part of the third sacral vertebrae. The prostate part signal was hyperintense on T2-weighted MRI images. The shape of the prostate complex in dorsal view was craniocaudally elongated, oval and localised bilate¬rally from prostatic urethra in ventrodorsal view. The transverse T2 image of the pelvis through the 2nd sacral vertebra delineated the prostate part of the gland as a bilateral bilobed oval structure with hypointense parenchyma, embraced by a hyperintense capsule. The intrapelvic localisation and the shape of MRI image of healthy rabbit prostate complex is a species-specific morphological feature. The signal hyperintensity of rabbit prostate complex was higher on T2-weighted images. The T2 hy-perintensity of prostate part vs hypointensity of proprostate and paraprostate parts provide evidence for the presence of substantial amount of glandular elements, presuming a dominating role of prostate part in the secretory function of the glandular complex.

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