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Evidence for extraplacental sources of circulating angiogenic growth effectors in human pregnancy
(Placenta, 2013-08-24)
Abastract.
Pregnancy complications such as preeclampsia (PE) and intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) are
associated with reduced blood flow, contributing to placental and fetal hypoxia. Placental hypoxia is
thought ...
New data demonstrates that relationship of salivary to serum progesterone in Bolivian women is comparable to that in other populations
(36th Annual Meeting Minnesota, 2011-04-13)
Abstract.
Salivary progesterone (P) concentration is widely
used in field studies as a relatively easy-to-measure
proxy for serum P. Chatterton et al. [Fertility & Sterility 86:723 (2006)] compared sample means of ...
Hypoglycemia and the origin of hypoxia-induced reduction in human fetal growth
(PLOS One, 2010-01)
Abtract.
Background: The most well known reproductive consequence of residence at high altitude (HA .2700 m) is reduction in
fetal growth. Reduced fetoplacental oxygenation is an underlying cause of pregnancy pathologies, ...
Maternal and fetoplacental hypoxia do not alter circulating angiogenic growth factors : the emperor's got no clothes?
(The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 2010)
ABSTRACT.
Context: Placental hypoxia alters production of angiogenic growth factors (AGFs), thought to be
causally involved in the development of the pregnancy-specific disease preeclampsia (PE).
Consistent with this, ...
Maternal and fetoplacental hypoxia do not alter circulating angiogenec growth effectors during human pregnancy
(Biol Reprod., 2014-02-27)
Abstract.
One causal model of preeclampsia (PE) postulates that
placental hypoxia alters the production of angiogenic growth
effectors (AGEs), causing an imbalance leading to maternal
endothelial cell dysfunction. We ...