Post-mortem characterization of human spinal cord morphometric landmarks and individual segments
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- Objectives: The location of the spinal cord (SC) segments in patients is currently based on the adjacent vertebrae and remains evasive. The aim of this study is to elaborate a comprehensive morphometric dataset allowing SC segment localization on MRI, thereby allowing identification of damaged levels and targeted procedures such as SC stimulation. Materials and Methods: we dissected and removed the SC from 18 female and 14 male (88±8.2 and 82±8.3 years old, respectively) caucasian bodies. On each SC, we delimited each individual segment. Anterior and posterior length, thickness and width, were measured by two examiners. An ICC test, T-test (to compare the average of two samples) and Pearson test (for correlation) were used to analyse the data, with Sigmaplot software. Results: Female whole SC length was significantly shorter than male. Statistical analysis of lengths widths and thicknesses allow the identifications of a subset of SC segments. The cranial (C4) and caudal (T1/T2) limits of the cervical enlargement as well as its maximal width (C6-C7) are identified using a combination of widths and thicknesses. The thoracic region from T2 to T12 can also be identified using widths and thicknesses values. The length of the lumbo-sacral region from L2 to S5 is particularly stable irrespective from SC length and gender. Only thicknesses highlight the lumbar enlargement between L2 and S1 culminating in L3-L4-L5. Finally, from S2 to S5, widths equal thicknesses and both decrease from 1mm/segment. Conclusions: Thorough morphometrical analysis of dissected human SC provided a robust dataset allowing statistical analysis of segmental measures. A combined approach using mostly widths and thicknesses provides landmarks allowing the location of subsets of SC segments of potential interest in a standard clinical MRI setting