NeoReviews Vol.7 No.4 2006 e189
© 2006 American Academy of Pediatrics
An Obstetric Point of View on Fetal Adaptation and Reprogramming
Robert Gagnon, MD*
* Professor, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Physiology and Pharmacology and of Pediatrics, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada
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Objectives
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After completing this article, readers should be able to: - Define the difference between fetal adaptation and fetal programming.
- Describe the mechanisms involved in maintaining fetal oxygenation.
- Describe how maternal glycemic control affects fetal growth and development.
- List the known stimuli involved in fetal programming in humans.
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Adaptation and Reprogramming
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For pregnant women who want to have healthy babies and their obstetricians, the period extending from several weeks prior to conception until birth is of obvious interest. Problems affecting pregnancy may have consequences on the developing fetus resulting from adaptation or reprogramming. An adaptation is the action or process of adapting or being adapted. Adaptation implies a change by which an organism becomes better suited to its environment. Programming describes the mechanisms by which a stimulus or insult at a critical period of development has lasting or lifelong effects.
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Fetal Adaptation to Hypoxia and Hyperglycemia
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Pregnancy affects all the determinants of oxygen delivery to the uteroplacental circulation. Maternal ventilation increases, which normally does not change arterial O2 saturation, although mild respiratory alkalosis ensues. Maternal hemoglobin concentrations decline due to greater expansion of plasma than red cell mass and reduced arterial O2 content. A rise in uteroplacental blood flow is due to higher cardiac output and redistribution of blood flow to favor uteroplacental circulation. Maternal cardiac output increases as a result of a decrease in systemic vascular resistance that begins in the luteal phase immediately following conception and an increase in blood volume.
The fetus lives and grows in a relatively "hypoxic" environment compared with the adult. The fetal arterial PO2 is approximately 20 mm Hg compared with approximately 80 mm Hg in adults. The low fetal arterial PO2 can be attributed largely to the venous equilibration of placental gas exchange in which both maternal uterine venous and fetal umbilical venous vasculature streams run in the same direction and . . . [Full Text of this Article]
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J. Gosselin, J.-C. Fouron, and C. Amiel-Tison
Consequences of Uteroplacental Insufficiency on Developmental and Intellectual Performances
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[Full Text]
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Copyright © 2006 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.