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Journal of the American College of Nutrition, Vol 14, Issue 2 165-168, Copyright © 1995 by American College of Nutrition


JOURNAL ARTICLE

Effect of maternal oxygen therapy on placental calcium transport in intrauterine growth retarded rats

F. Mimouni, Z. Mughal, R. C. Tsang and G. Hammond
Department of Pediatrics, Maimonides Medical Center, Brooklyn, New York 11219, USA.

OBJECTIVE: We tested the hypothesis that continuous maternal oxygen (O2) therapy leads to an increase in fetal survival, improvement in fetal growth, and correction of decreased placental calcium (Ca) transport, in pregnant rats who underwent uterine artery ligation. STUDY DESIGN: We measured on Day 21 of pregnancy, the unidirectional maternofetal clearance of 45Ca (Kmf45Ca) and 51Cr-EDTA (Kmf51Cr-EDTA) across in-situ perfused placentas of rats randomized on Day 17 to a modified Wigglesworth (bilateral uterine artery ligation) procedure (group WW, n = 8), to modified Wigglesworth and supplemental maternal O2 treatment (FiO2 0.40) (group WWO2, n = 8), or to a sham operation (group Sh, n = 8). Kmf51Cr-EDTA provides a measure of placental "porosity" or passive permeability. RESULTS: Maternal O2 therapy did not improve fetal survival, fetal growth, or placental Ca transport. CONCLUSION AND SPECULATION: Bilateral uterine ligation in the pregnant rat leads to IUGR and decreased placental Ca transport which cannot be corrected by maternal O2 therapy.





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Copyright © 1995 by the American College of Nutrition.