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Development and Mechanisms of Fetal Hypoxia in Severe Fetal Growth Restriction

Overview
Journal Placenta
Publisher Elsevier
Date 2006 Sep 12
PMID 16962658
Citations 52
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Abstract

Severe fetal growth restriction (FGR) is often associated with hypoxia. We studied FGR hypoxia in an experimental model which is produced by exposing pregnant ewes to a hyperthermic environment. The study utilized simultaneous measurements of several relevant factors, e.g., uterine and umbilical blood flows and O(2) uptakes. Sixteen ewes were divided equally into control (C) and hyperthermic (HT) groups. Hyperthermia (40 degrees C for 12h/35 degrees C for 12h; approximately 35% relative humidity, RH) was maintained for 80 days commencing at approximately 38 days gestational age (dGA term 147+/-3 days). All ewes were then placed in a control environment ( approximately 21 degrees C, 24h; approximately 30% RH) and studied at approximately 134 dGA. Mean HT placental and fetal weights were 39% and 45% of C, respectively (p<0.0001), umbilical O(2) uptake/kg fetus was 76% of C (p<0.01) and umbilical venous PO(2) was reduced (20.2 vs. 29.7 Torr, p<0.001). Contrary to the hypothesis that FGR hypoxia is due to maternal placental hypoperfusion, uterine flow was not reduced in relation to O(2) uptake. The uterine-umbilical venous PO(2) difference was enlarged (38 vs. 23 Torr, p<0.0001). This difference is the expression of a balance between developmental changes in placental structure and oxidative metabolism, which have opposite effects in terms of fetal oxygenation. We postulate that FGR hypoxia results from disproportionate underdevelopment of those changes which allow for a progressive increase in umbilical O(2) uptake.

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