| Literature DB >> 23874755 |
Yvonne A Eiby1, Layne L Wright, Viskasari P Kalanjati, Stephanie M Miller, Stella T Bjorkman, Helen L Keates, Eugenie R Lumbers, Paul B Colditz, Barbara E Lingwood.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Large animal models are an essential tool in the development of rationally-based new clinical therapies for preterm infants. We provide a description of the newborn pig as a model of the preterm neonate in terms of growth parameters, physiology and the requirement for intensive care over a range of gestational ages.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23874755 PMCID: PMC3706365 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0068763
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Gestational ages, sex ratios, body and organ weights of preterm piglets delivered by caesarean section.
| Gestational age (days) Term = 115d | % gestation | No. Litters | No. Female and male piglets (F:M) | Body (g) | Heart (g) | Brain (g) | Liver (g) | Kidney (g) | Brain:liver |
| 91 | 79 | 4 | 20∶20 | 697±193 (40) | 5.2±1.3 (34) | 18.6±1.7 (29) | 16.4±4.5 (29) | 2.9±0.8 (29) | 1.20±0.31 (27) |
| 94 | 82 | 1 | 5∶6 | 902±71 (11) | 5.1±0.5 (5) | – | – | 4.0±1.1 (5) | – |
| 97 | 84 | 5 | 17∶23 | 881±213 (41) | 7.0±1.6 (33) | 21.9±2.2 (17) | 19.0±4.3 (17) | 4.3±1.3 (30) | 1.20±0.29 (17) |
| 100 | 87 | 2 | 13∶14 | 841±171 (27) | 5.6±2.2 (18) | 24.8±2.9 (21) | 20.4±5.3 (18) | 3.4±1.0 (18) | 1.28±0.30 (18) |
| 104 | 90 | 2 | 12∶12 | 1095±225 (24) | 7.6±2.3 (15) | 26.0±1.8 (15) | 23.8±5.9 (15) | 4.5±1.4 (15) | 1.15±0.26 (15) |
| 113 | 98 | 7 | 40∶33 | 1331±368 (73) | 11.6±3.3 (53) | 30.9±2.9 (25) | 46.8±12.0 (20) | 5.1±1.6 (49) | 0.72±0.21 (19) |
| PNA 1d | 100 | 45 | - | 1512±329 (460) | – | – | – | – | – |
| 91+ GC | 79 | 4 | 12∶24 | 715±149 (36) | 5.2±1.3 (31) | 18.6±1.7 (20) | 19.8±7.8 (27) | 3.3±0.8 (27) | 1.25±0.35 (20) |
| 97+ GC | 84 | 4 | 20∶27 | 1021±180 (46) | 7.1±1. 3 (45) | 23.5±2.0 (21) | 35.9±6.2 (21) | 4.5±1.0 (36) | 0.67±0.11 (20) |
Weights are means ± SD (n). PNA (postnatal age) indicates piglets born at term by spontaneous vaginal delivery and weighed 3–24 h post-birth. GC indicates animals treated with maternal glucocorticoids prior to birth.
p = 0.010, interaction effect between sex and maternal glucocorticoid treatment.
p<0.001, effect of maternal glucocorticoid treatment.
Figure 1Brain and body weights of piglets over a range of gestational ages.
Closed circles represent normal body weight animals and open squares represent animals with body weight <10th centile. Not all piglets had brain weight recorded. Note the spread of weights within a given gestational age is greater for the body than for the brain implying that brain growth is relatively preserved even when body weight is low.
Figure 2Relative organ growth from 91d to 113d of gestation (term = 115d) for A) heart, B) brain, C) liver, D) kidney.
The solid line is the 50th centile and the dashed lines are the 10th and 90th centiles. Note the weight of all organs increased proportionally with body weight, except for the liver which increased significantly relative to body weight between 104d and 113d (p = 0.004). Data from 94d was not included as only one litter was studied and few organ weights were recorded.
Physiology of preterm and near term piglets.
| Physiological Variable | Preterm (97 d) | Preterm+GC (97 d) | Near term (113 d) | P value | ||
| Mean arterial pressure (mmHg) | 30.0±0.9 (15) | 29.2±0.8 (15) | 36.5±1.4 (14) | <0.001 | ||
| Heart rate (bpm) | 178±11 (15) | 177±27 (15) | 173±7 (16) | ns | ||
| pCO2 (mmHg) | initial | 38.8±19.8 (17) | 28.5±5.2 (16) | 31.4±12.2 (16) | ns | |
| maintenance | 36.4±9.0 (17) | 41.7±7.0 (16) | 35.8±2.8 (15) | ns | ||
| pO2 (mmHg) | initial | 195±167 (17) | 251±139 (16) | 121±51 (16) | 0.025 | |
| maintenance | 147±71 (16) | 112±36 (16) | 111±32 (15) | ns | ||
| pH | initial | 7.49±0.20 (17) | 7.62±0.07 (16) | 7.57±0.13 (16) | 0.037 | |
| maintenance | 7.50±0.07 (17) | 7.46±0.07 (16) | 7.60±0.08 (16) | <0.001 | ||
| ABE (mmol/L) | initial | 3.7±3.9 (17) | 7.1±2.4 (16) | 5.2±2.7 (16) | 0.010 | |
| maintenance | 4.2±2.6 (16) | 4.7±2.2 (16) | 5.8±2.0 (15) | ns | ||
| FiO2 (%) | initial | 96±9 (17) | 75±27 (16) | 35±19 (16) | <0.001 | |
| maintenance | 70±26 (17) | 41±14 (16) | 32±20 (15) | <0.001 | ||
| Hb (mmol/L) | 81±23 (17) | 89±9 (16) | 74±19 (16) | ns | ||
Physiological parameters of piglets delivered by caesarean section at 97 d gestation (untreated), 97 d (treated with maternal glucocorticoids = GC) and 113 d gestation (term is 115 d). Mean arterial pressure and heart rate have been averaged over a 10 min period (approximately 30 min post-birth). Initial arterial blood gas parameters are from the first blood gas taken 30–60 min post-birth and so reflect the response to the initial ventilatory settings. Maintenance values were obtained prior to experimentation and reflect ongoing maintenance. GC indicates animals treated with maternal glucocorticoids prior to birth. pCO2 is carbon dioxide partial pressure, pO2 is oxygen partial pressure, ABE is arterial base excess, FiO2 is fraction of inspired oxygen, Hb is haemoglobin. All values are mean ± SD (n).
indicates significantly different to near term piglets (p<0.05).
indicates a significant difference between untreated preterm piglets and preterm piglets treated with maternal glucocorticoids (p<0.05).
Figure 3Mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) for a preterm (97d) and a term (113d) piglet (term = 115d) for six hours following delivery by Caesarean section.
Note the preterm piglet has a lower and less stable mean arterial pressure (MAP).