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Review
. 1997 Nov;18(8):613-21; discussion 623-6.
doi: 10.1016/s0143-4004(97)90000-x.

Oxygen and placental villous development: origins of fetal hypoxia

Affiliations
Review

Oxygen and placental villous development: origins of fetal hypoxia

J C Kingdom et al. Placenta. 1997 Nov.

Abstract

The increasing practice of preterm delivery in the fetal interest for conditions such as pre-eclampsia or intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) has provided an opportunity to study placental structure in pregnancies with prenatal evidence of fetal compromise. These data suggest that the origin of fetal hypoxia in IUGR with absent end-diastolic flow in the umbilical arteries is due to a failure of oxygen transport from intervillous space to umbilical vein. Failure of the fetoplacental circulation to extract oxygen from the intervillous space under such circumstances means intervillous PO2 is closer to maternal arterial values than under physiological conditions. Correspondingly the placental villi are chronically exposed to a higher oxygen tension than under normal circumstances--the term ¿hyperoxia', relative to normal intraplacental oxygenation, is proposed to describe this situation. Both the trophoblast and villous core react to increased oxygen despite fetal hypoxia. These results challenge the generally accepted concept of ¿placental hypoxia' in all circumstances where fetal hypoxia might arise. Therefore three categories are proposed for the origins of fetal hypoxia: (1) preplacental hypoxia; (2) uteroplacental hypoxia; and (3) postplacental hypoxia. Examples for these three disease states are listed in this review and the structural reaction patterns of placental villi to these differences in oxygenation are discussed.

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