Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences in endocrinology
Endocrine Abstracts (2003) 6 OC21

SFE2003 Oral Communications Growth and Development (8 abstracts)

CHRONIC UMBILICAL CORD COMPRESSION BLUNTS THE FETAL PLASMA ARGININE VASOPRESSIN (AVP) RESPONSE TO SUBSEQUENT ACUTE HYPOXAEMIA

DS Gardner 1 , AL Fowden 2 & DA Giussani 2


1School of Human Development, Academic Division of Child Health, University Hospital, Nottingham.; 2Department of Physiology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.


Introduction: Increased plasma AVP contributes to the peripheral vasoconstrictor response to acute hypoxaemia in the fetus (Giussani et al. J.Physiol. 477, 81, 1994). We have shown that fetal pre-exposure to umbilical cord compression (UCC) sufficient to restrict fetal blood supply by 30%, markedly blunts the subsequent fetal vasoconstrictor response to hypoxaemia (Gardner et al. Circulation 106: 2278, 2002). This study determined whether this blunting is due to an effect on fetal plasma AVP concentration.

Methods: Under halothane anaesthesia, 15 fetal sheep were instrumented with an inflatable occluder around the umbilical cord, a Transonic flow probe around an umbilical artery and vascular catheters at 118 days of gestation. In 8 fetuses umbilical blood flow was reduced by 30% for 3 days beginning at 125 days by automated compression of the umbilical cord (UCC). The remaining fetuses acted as sham controls (n=7). At 130 pluminus 1 days, 2 days after recovery from cord compression, all fetuses were made hypoxic for 1h by maternal inhalational hypoxia. Maternal and fetal blood was taken at appropriate intervals during acute hypoxaemia for measurement of plasma AVP by validated RIA.

Results: Maternal basal plasma AVP was similar between groups and remained unchanged during hypoxaemia (2.5 plusminus 0.5 pg.ml-1). In contrast, a pronounced increase in plasma AVP occurred in control fetuses during hypoxaemia (4.8 plusminus 0.7 to 164±56 pg/ml). This increase was markedly blunted in UCC fetuses (6.1 plusminus 1.6 to 35 plusminus 9 pg/ml, P<0.05).

Conclusion: Suppression of the peripheral vasoconstrictor responses to hypoxaemia in previously cord-compressed fetuses may reflect, in part, blunting of the increase in plasma AVP concentration.

Volume 6

194th Meeting of the Society for Endocrinology and Society for Endocrinology joint with Diabetes UK Endocrinology and Diabetes Day

Society for Endocrinology 

Browse other volumes

Article tools

My recent searches

No recent searches.