High-end arteriolar resistance limits uterine artery blood flow and restricts fetal growth in preeclampsia and gestational hypertension at high altitude
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Date
2011Author
Browne, Vaughn A
Toledo-Jaldín, Lilian
Dávila, R Daniela
López, Luis P
Yamashiro, Henry
Cioffi-Ragan, Darleen
Julian, Colleen Glyde
Wilson, Megan J
Bigham, Abigail W
Shriver, Mark D
Honigman, Benjamín
Vargas, Enrique
Roach, Robert
Moore, Lorna G
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Show full item recordAbstract
The reduction in
infant birth weight and increased frequency of preeclampsia (PE) in
high-altitude residents have been attributed to greater placental hypoxia, smaller uterine artery (UA) diameter, and lower UA blood flow
(QUA). This cross-sectional case-control study determined UA, common iliac (CI), and external iliac (EI) arterial blood flow in Andeans
residing at 3,600–4,100 m, who were either nonpregnant (NP, n
23), or experiencing normotensive pregnancies (NORM; n 155),
preeclampsia (PE, n 20), or gestational hypertension (GH, n 12).
Pregnancy enlarged UA diameter to 0.62 cm in all groups, but
indices of end-arteriolar vascular resistance were higher in PE or GH
than in NORM. QUA was lower in early-onset ( 34 wk) PE or GH
than in NORM, but was normal in late-onset ( 34 wk) illness. Left
QUA was consistently greater than right in NORM, but the pattern
reversed in PE. Although QCI and QEI were higher in PE and GH than
NORM, the fraction of QCI distributed to the UA was reduced 2- to
3-fold. Women with early-onset PE delivered preterm, and 43% had
stillborn small for gestational age (SGA) babies. Those with GH and
late-onset PE delivered at term but had higher frequencies of SGA
babies (GH 50%, PE 46% vs. NORM 15%, both P 0.01). Birth
weight was strongly associated with reduced QUA (R2 0.80, P
0.01), as were disease severity and adverse fetal outcomes. We
concluded that high end-arteriolar resistance, not smaller UA diameter, limited QUA and restricted fetal growth in PE and GH. These are, to our knowledge, the first quantitative measurements of QUA and
pelvic blood flow in early- vs. late-onset PE in high-altitude residents.