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Mice with a deletion in the first intron of the Col1a1 gene develop dissection and rupture of aorta in the absence of aneurysms: High‐resolution magnetic resonance imaging, at 4.7 T, of the aorta and cerebral arteries
Author(s) -
Marjamaa J.,
Tulamo R.,
AboRamadan U.,
Hakovirta H.,
Frösen J.,
Rahkonen O.,
Niemelä M.,
Bornstein P.,
Penttinen R.,
Kangasniemi M.
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
magnetic resonance in medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.696
H-Index - 225
eISSN - 1522-2594
pISSN - 0740-3194
DOI - 10.1002/mrm.20798
Subject(s) - dissection (medical) , magnetic resonance imaging , aorta , aortic dissection , medicine , aneurysm , magnetic resonance angiography , pulse (music) , anatomy , radiology , nuclear magnetic resonance , cardiology , physics , detector , optics
Abstract Deletion of the majority of the first intron of the Col1a1 gene in mice leads to decreased type I collagen synthesis and content in the aortic wall. In 54% of cases, mice homozygous for the Col1a1 mutation die of thoracic hemorrhage by the age of 18 months. It is unknown whether the fatal bleeding results from an acute dissection of the aortic wall or a gradually developing dilatation of the medial layer prior to rupture. We optimized high‐resolution MRI methods using a 4.7 T MR scanner to obtain in vivo images of the entire mouse aorta. The MR images were acquired in three imaging planes using gradient echo, spin echo, and spin echo with inversion recovery pulse sequences with a maximum in‐plane resolution of 68 × 68 μm and acquisition times less than 10 min. In five Col1a1 mutated mice aged 16 months, the MR images showed no signs of aneurysmal dilatation, wall defects, or former dissection, suggesting that the mechanism for aortic rupture is an acute dissection of the aortic medial layer. Cerebral arteries were imaged using a three‐dimensional time of fight pulse sequence. The resolution of 73 × 73 × 94 μm showed normal cerebral arteries. Histology showed a 22% thinner cerebral artery wall in Col1a1 mutated mice. Magn Reson Med, 2006. © 2006 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.