J Korean Med Sci.  1989 Mar;4(1):35-50. 10.3346/jkms.1989.4.1.35.

Experimental exencephaly and myeloschisis in rats

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Neurosurgery, Seoul Red Cross Hospital, Korea.

Abstract

To elucidate the early sequential morphogenetic progress of exencephaly and myeloschisis, rat embryos whose mothers had been treated with hypervitaminosis A were studied at 1-day interval from gestation day 10.5 to 15.5. In exposed animals sequential change was found in both exencephaly and myeloschisis as the embryos grew up. The 10.5-day old exencephalic embryos had still widely open cephalic neural tubes. Exencephalic embryos older than 13.5 days of gestation showed strikingly severe eversion and overgrowth of the cephalic neuroepithelium, thus failed in forming normal primitive brain. The convex dorsal surface of the exencephaly was covered with ependyma, which was connected directly with surrounding surface eqithelium at the periphery. The earliest morphologically recognized myeloschisis was in the 13.5-day old embryos. In myeloschisis, divergence at the roof plate and eversion of the spinal neural tube, disorganized overgrowth of the neuroepithelium, malformed and misplaced spinal ganglia and nerve roots, and absence of the neural arch and dermal covering were characteristic. It is suggested that exencephaly results from failure of the cephalic neural tube closure which is followed by eversion and overgrowth of the neuroepithelium. And failure in closure of the posterior neuropore and disturbance in the development of the tail bud probably play major role in the morphogenesis of myeloschisis.

Keyword

Exencephaly; Myeloschisis; Vitamin A; Morphogenesis; Malformation; Teratology

MeSH Terms

Animals
*Embryonic and Fetal Development
Female
Hypervitaminosis A
Neural Tube Defects/chemically induced/*pathology
Pregnancy
Rats
Rats, Inbred Strains
Spinal Cord/*abnormalities/embryology
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