BioTechniques (Aug 2019)

A standardized method for collection of human placenta samples in the age of functional magnetic resonance imaging

  • Victoria HJ Roberts,
  • Jessica E Gaffney,
  • Katherine S Lewandowski,
  • Matthias C Schabel,
  • Terry K Morgan,
  • Antonio E Frias

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2144/btn-2019-0029
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 67, no. 2
pp. 45 – 49

Abstract

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Current methods for placental tissue collection assess a delivered organ without direct functional correlates; therefore, the four-quadrant biopsy protocol utilized by many researchers may provide reasonable representation of tissue across a large organ, and offer a snapshot for molecular analysis of the placenta. However, the recent impetus to understand the placenta in real time, and the use of functional imaging to comprehend placental biology, warrants a different sampling approach. Here we present a method to standardize placental tissue collection in a format designed to facilitate correlation of in vivo function with ex vivo assessments. Additionally, we draw comparisons to the quadrant biopsy regimen, and highlight a pathological case of placental infarction detected by in utero imaging.

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