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Gestational Dietary Protein Is Associated with Sex Specific Decrease in Blood Flow, Fetal Heart Growth and Post-Natal Blood Pressure of Progeny

STUDY OVERVIEW: The incidence of adverse pregnancy outcomes is higher in pregnancies where the fetus is male. Sex specific differences in feto-placental perfusion indices identified by Doppler assessment have recently been associated with placental insufficiency and fetal growth restriction. This st...

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Autores principales: Hernandez-Medrano, Juan H., Copping, Katrina J., Hoare, Andrew, Wapanaar, Wendela, Grivell, Rosalie, Kuchel, Tim, Miguel-Pacheco, Giuliana, McMillen, I. Caroline, Rodgers, Raymond J., Perry, Viv E. A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4411147/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25915506
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0125694
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author Hernandez-Medrano, Juan H.
Copping, Katrina J.
Hoare, Andrew
Wapanaar, Wendela
Grivell, Rosalie
Kuchel, Tim
Miguel-Pacheco, Giuliana
McMillen, I. Caroline
Rodgers, Raymond J.
Perry, Viv E. A.
author_facet Hernandez-Medrano, Juan H.
Copping, Katrina J.
Hoare, Andrew
Wapanaar, Wendela
Grivell, Rosalie
Kuchel, Tim
Miguel-Pacheco, Giuliana
McMillen, I. Caroline
Rodgers, Raymond J.
Perry, Viv E. A.
author_sort Hernandez-Medrano, Juan H.
collection PubMed
description STUDY OVERVIEW: The incidence of adverse pregnancy outcomes is higher in pregnancies where the fetus is male. Sex specific differences in feto-placental perfusion indices identified by Doppler assessment have recently been associated with placental insufficiency and fetal growth restriction. This study aims to investigate sex specific differences in placental perfusion and to correlate these changes with fetal growth. It represents the largest comprehensive study under field conditions of uterine hemodynamics in a monotocous species, with a similar long gestation period to the human. Primiparous 14mo heifers in Australia (n=360) and UK (n=180) were either individually or group fed, respectively, diets with differing protein content (18, 14, 10 or 7% crude protein (CP)) from 60d prior to 98 days post conception (dpc). Fetuses and placentae were excised at 98dpc (n = 48). Fetal development an median uterine artery blood flow were assessed monthly from 36dpc until term using B-mode and Doppler ultrasonography. MUA blood flow to the male feto-placental unit increased in early pregnancy associated with increased fetal growth. Protein restriction before and shortly after conception (-60d up to 23dpc) increased MUA diameter and indices of velocity during late pregnancy, reduced fetal heart weight in the female fetus and increased heart rate at birth, but decreased systolic blood pressure at six months of age. CONCLUSION AND SIGNIFICANCE: Sex specific differences both in feto-placental Doppler perfusion indices and response of these indices to dietary perturbations were observed. Further, maternal diet affected development of fetal cardiovascular system associated with altered fetal haemodynamics in utero, with such effects having a sex bias. The results from this study provide further insight into the gender specific circulatory differences present in the fetal period and developing cardiovascular system.
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spelling pubmed-44111472015-05-07 Gestational Dietary Protein Is Associated with Sex Specific Decrease in Blood Flow, Fetal Heart Growth and Post-Natal Blood Pressure of Progeny Hernandez-Medrano, Juan H. Copping, Katrina J. Hoare, Andrew Wapanaar, Wendela Grivell, Rosalie Kuchel, Tim Miguel-Pacheco, Giuliana McMillen, I. Caroline Rodgers, Raymond J. Perry, Viv E. A. PLoS One Research Article STUDY OVERVIEW: The incidence of adverse pregnancy outcomes is higher in pregnancies where the fetus is male. Sex specific differences in feto-placental perfusion indices identified by Doppler assessment have recently been associated with placental insufficiency and fetal growth restriction. This study aims to investigate sex specific differences in placental perfusion and to correlate these changes with fetal growth. It represents the largest comprehensive study under field conditions of uterine hemodynamics in a monotocous species, with a similar long gestation period to the human. Primiparous 14mo heifers in Australia (n=360) and UK (n=180) were either individually or group fed, respectively, diets with differing protein content (18, 14, 10 or 7% crude protein (CP)) from 60d prior to 98 days post conception (dpc). Fetuses and placentae were excised at 98dpc (n = 48). Fetal development an median uterine artery blood flow were assessed monthly from 36dpc until term using B-mode and Doppler ultrasonography. MUA blood flow to the male feto-placental unit increased in early pregnancy associated with increased fetal growth. Protein restriction before and shortly after conception (-60d up to 23dpc) increased MUA diameter and indices of velocity during late pregnancy, reduced fetal heart weight in the female fetus and increased heart rate at birth, but decreased systolic blood pressure at six months of age. CONCLUSION AND SIGNIFICANCE: Sex specific differences both in feto-placental Doppler perfusion indices and response of these indices to dietary perturbations were observed. Further, maternal diet affected development of fetal cardiovascular system associated with altered fetal haemodynamics in utero, with such effects having a sex bias. The results from this study provide further insight into the gender specific circulatory differences present in the fetal period and developing cardiovascular system. Public Library of Science 2015-04-27 /pmc/articles/PMC4411147/ /pubmed/25915506 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0125694 Text en © 2015 Hernandez-Medrano et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Hernandez-Medrano, Juan H.
Copping, Katrina J.
Hoare, Andrew
Wapanaar, Wendela
Grivell, Rosalie
Kuchel, Tim
Miguel-Pacheco, Giuliana
McMillen, I. Caroline
Rodgers, Raymond J.
Perry, Viv E. A.
Gestational Dietary Protein Is Associated with Sex Specific Decrease in Blood Flow, Fetal Heart Growth and Post-Natal Blood Pressure of Progeny
title Gestational Dietary Protein Is Associated with Sex Specific Decrease in Blood Flow, Fetal Heart Growth and Post-Natal Blood Pressure of Progeny
title_full Gestational Dietary Protein Is Associated with Sex Specific Decrease in Blood Flow, Fetal Heart Growth and Post-Natal Blood Pressure of Progeny
title_fullStr Gestational Dietary Protein Is Associated with Sex Specific Decrease in Blood Flow, Fetal Heart Growth and Post-Natal Blood Pressure of Progeny
title_full_unstemmed Gestational Dietary Protein Is Associated with Sex Specific Decrease in Blood Flow, Fetal Heart Growth and Post-Natal Blood Pressure of Progeny
title_short Gestational Dietary Protein Is Associated with Sex Specific Decrease in Blood Flow, Fetal Heart Growth and Post-Natal Blood Pressure of Progeny
title_sort gestational dietary protein is associated with sex specific decrease in blood flow, fetal heart growth and post-natal blood pressure of progeny
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4411147/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25915506
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0125694
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