| Literature DB >> 17510190 |
Stacy Zamudio1, Lucrecia Postigo, Nicholas P Illsley, Carmelo Rodriguez, Gladys Heredia, Michael Brimacombe, Lourdes Echalar, Tatiana Torricos, Wilma Tellez, Ivan Maldonado, Elfride Balanza, Tatiana Alvarez, Julio Ameller, Enrique Vargas.
Abstract
Fetal growth is reduced at high altitude, but the decrease is less among long-resident populations. We hypothesized that greater maternal uteroplacental O(2) delivery would explain increased fetal growth in Andean natives versus European migrants to high altitude. O(2) delivery was measured with ultrasound, Doppler and haematological techniques. Participants (n=180) were pregnant women of self-professed European or Andean ancestry living at 3600 m or 400 m in Bolivia. Ancestry was quantified using ancestry-informative single nucleotide polymorphism. The altitude-associated decrement in birth weight was 418 g in European versus 236 g in Andean women (P<0.005). Altitude was associated with decreased uterine artery diameter, volumetric blood flow and O(2) delivery regardless of ancestry. But the hypothesis was rejected as O(2) delivery was similar between ancestry groups at their respective altitudes of residence. Instead, Andean neonates were larger and heavier per unit of O(2) delivery, regardless of altitude (P<0.001). European admixture among Andeans was negatively correlated with birth weight at both altitudes (P<0.01), but admixture was not related to any of the O(2) transport variables. Genetically mediated differences in maternal O(2) delivery are thus unlikely to explain the Andean advantage in fetal growth. Of the other independent variables, only placental weight and gestational age explained significant variation in birth weight. Thus greater placental efficiency in O(2) and nutrient transport, and/or greater fetal efficiency in substrate utilization may contribute to ancestry- and altitude-related differences in fetal growth. Uterine artery O(2) delivery in these pregnancies was 99 +/- 3 ml min(-1), approximately 5-fold greater than near-term fetal O(2) consumption. Deficits in maternal O(2) transport in third trimester normal pregnancy are unlikely to be causally associated with variation in fetal growth.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17510190 PMCID: PMC2075336 DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.2007.130708
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Physiol ISSN: 0022-3751 Impact factor: 5.182