| Literature DB >> 3397509 |
C T Jones1, W Gu, J E Harding, D A Price, J T Parer.
Abstract
The effect of long- and short-term manipulations of uterine blood flow on fetal plasma levels of IGF-I and -II have been studied in sheep at days 125-139 of pregnancy and compared with those in near term rats and guinea pig. The primary objective is to show that both long- and short-term reduction of uterine blood flow is associated with increase in the fetal plasma concentration of IGF-II while that of IGF-I falls. In the pregnant sheep long-term depression of utero-placental blood flow was caused by surgical reduction in placental mass (carunclectomy) prior to conception. This reduced fetal weight to 2.42 +/- 0.49 kg (SD) compared with 3.41 +/- 0.46 in controls; the respective values for uterine blood flow being 1694 +/- 558 and 913 +/- 324 ml/min respectively. This was associated with a fall in fetal plasma IGF-I concentration from 22.6 +/- 3.4 ng/ml to 14.9 +/- 1.31 ng/ml and a rise in IGF-II from 1952 +/- 284 ng/ml to 3360 +/- 914 ng/ml respectively. Similar changes in the plasma concentrations of IGF peptides were observed in fetal rats and guinea pigs in response to uterine artery ligation. Short-term reduction (60 min) of the uterine blood flow was caused either by compression of the common uterine artery to depress flow from 1491 +/- 375 to 648 +/- 216 ml/min or through intraarterial infusion of adrenaline at 35 ug/min to lower flow from 1628 +/- 339 to 1195 +/- 128 ml/min. Such falls in uterine blood flow had no significant effect on fetal plasma IGF-I levels but increased IGF-II levels by 30 to 60%.Entities:
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Year: 1988 PMID: 3397509
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Dev Physiol ISSN: 0141-9846