Design-based stereology is employed to estimate total numbers of
myocyte nuclei and mean myocyte volume
per nucleus in ventricles of fetal and early postnatal human hearts.
Organs were collected postmortem from
subjects varying in age from 16 gestational wk to 40 postnatal wk. Numbers
of myocyte nuclei per unit
volume of ventricle were estimated using physical disectors (parallel pairs
of sections). Absolute numbers
were calculated by multiplying nuclear packing densities by ventricular
volumes estimated from ventricular
mass and tissue density. Volumes per nucleus were obtained via estimates
of the combined volumes of all
myocytes (or of the myocardium as a whole) and the numbers of myocyte
nuclei. The findings showed that
numbers of myocyte nuclei increase linearly from 16 wk towards term. They
were also consistent with the
notion that hyperplasia ceases abruptly at birth or soon afterwards.
The net rate of production of myocyte
nuclei was about 38×107/wk (2.3 million nuclei/h).
The total volume of myocytes continued to expand in
the same way from 16 wk to at least 35 wk of gestation. Published
studies on the incidence of binucleate
myocytes during early postnatal growth of the ventricles of rats
suggest that the volume of a myocyte
doubles prior to nuclear division. Prenatal growth in the human heart
is consistent with this mechanism.
Myocardial hypertrophy after birth must occur by cellular hypertrophy
without karyokinesis.