1. Ontogeny of the human fetal, neonatal, and infantile basioccipital bone: Traditional and extended eigenshape geometric morphometric analysis.
- Author
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Zdilla MJ, Pancake JP, Russell ML, and Koons AW
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Pregnancy, Skull Base, Sphenoid Bone, Fetus, Occipital Bone
- Abstract
The basioccipital bone is an essential developmental component to the occipital bone, occipital condyles, foramen magnum, clivus, and cranial base. The basioccipital bone joins each exoccipital bone with a basiexoccipital synchondrosis and the basisphenoid/sphenoid bone with a spheno-occipital synchondrosis. The basioccipital is found intermediate to the petrous temporal bones and forms the bilateral petrooccipital/petroclival fissures otherwise known as the petrooccipital complex. Thus, the basioccipital bone is a central component to the developing cranial base. Despite the importance of basioccipital development in cranial ontogeny, there has been limited study of basioccipital ontogeny. This study assessed 98 disarticulated human basioccipital bones from a perinatal population ranging in age-at-death from 5-months intrauterine to 5-months post-natal development. Size and shape of basioccipital bones were assessed with traditional and extended eigenshape geometric morphometric analysis. The results of this study demonstrate that the basioccipital bone grows in width at a faster rate than it grows in length. The maximum basioccipital width surpassed the midsagittal length at approximately 7-months intrauterine development. Canonical variate analysis revealed statistically significant shape change occurring from a relatively narrow/elongate (anterior-to-posterior) basiocciput shape with mild concavity at the foramen magnum in the fifth and sixth intrauterine months to a relatively broad/stout basiocciput shape with more pronounced concavity in the postnatal months. Likewise, growth rate in total length was greater than midsagittal length, demonstrating enlargement of concavity in the anterior foramen magnum over time. This report provides insight into cranial development and aids in estimating age-at-death among fetuses and infants., (© 2021 American Association for Anatomy.)
- Published
- 2022
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