Artículos de revistas
Uterine artery blood flow, fetal hypoxia and fetal growth
Fecha
2015-03-13Institución
Resumen
Evolutionary trade-offs required for bipedalism and brain expansion influence
the pregnancy rise in uterine artery (UtA) blood flow and, in turn, reproductive
success. We consider the importance of UtA blood flow by reviewing
its determinants and presenting data from 191 normotensive (normal,
n ¼ 125) or hypertensive (preeclampsia (PE) or gestational hypertension
(GH), n ¼ 29) Andean residents of very high (4100–4300 m) or low altitude
(400 m, n ¼ 37). Prior studies show that UtA blood flow is reduced in pregnancies with intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) but whether the IUGR is due to
resultant fetal hypoxia is unclear. We found higher UtA blood flow and Doppler indices of fetal hypoxia in normotensive women at high versus low
altitude but similar fetal growth. UtA blood flow was markedly lower in
early-onset PE versus normal high-altitude women, and their fetuses more
hypoxic as indicated by lower fetal heart rate, Doppler indices and greater
IUGR. We concluded that, despite greater fetal hypoxia, fetal growth was
well defended by higher UtA blood flows in normal Andeans at high altitude
but when compounded by lower UtA blood flow in early-onset PE, exaggerated
fetal hypoxia caused the fetus to respond by decreasing cardiac output and
redistributing blood flow to help maintain brain development at the expense
of growth elsewhere. We speculate that UtA blood flow is not only an important
supply line but also a trigger for stimulating the metabolic and other processes
regulating feto-placental metabolism and growth. Studies using the natural laboratory of high altitude are valuable for identifying the physiological and
genetic mechanisms involved in human reproductive success.