Effects of early daily alcohol exposure on placental function and fetal growth in a rhesus macaque model

Prenatal alcohol exposure is the most common cause of birth defects and intellectual disabilities and can increase the risk of stillbirth and negatively impact fetal growth. To determine the effect of early prenatal alcohol exposure on nonhuman primate placental function and fetal growth. We hypothe...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of obstetrics and gynecology 2022-01, Vol.226 (1), p.130.e1-130.e11
Hauptverfasser: Lo, Jamie O., Schabel, Matthias C., Roberts, Victoria H.J., Morgan, Terry K., Fei, Suzanne S., Gao, Lina, Ray, Karina G., Lewandowski, Katherine S., Newman, Natali P., Bohn, Jacqueline A., Grant, Kathleen A., Frias, Antonio E., Kroenke, Christopher D.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Prenatal alcohol exposure is the most common cause of birth defects and intellectual disabilities and can increase the risk of stillbirth and negatively impact fetal growth. To determine the effect of early prenatal alcohol exposure on nonhuman primate placental function and fetal growth. We hypothesized that early chronic prenatal alcohol would alter placental perfusion and oxygen availability that adversely affects fetal growth. Rhesus macaques self-administered 1.5 g/kg/d of ethanol (n=12) or isocaloric maltose-dextrin (n=12) daily before conception through the first 60 days of gestation (term is approximately 168 days). All animals were serially imaged with Doppler ultrasound to measure fetal biometry, uterine artery volume blood flow, and placental volume blood flow. Following Doppler ultrasound, all animals underwent both blood oxygenation level–dependent magnetic resonance imaging to characterize placental blood oxygenation and dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging to quantify maternal placental perfusion. Animals were delivered by cesarean delivery for placental collection and fetal necropsy at gestational days 85 (n=8), 110 (n=8), or 135 (n=8). Histologic and RNA-sequencing analyses were performed on collected placental tissue. Placental volume blood flow was decreased at all gestational time points in ethanol-exposed vs control animals, but most significantly at gestational day 110 by Doppler ultrasound (P
ISSN:0002-9378
1097-6868
DOI:10.1016/j.ajog.2021.07.028