scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Topic

Fetus

About: Fetus is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 21567 publications have been published within this topic receiving 646380 citations. The topic is also known as: foetus & fœtus.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Antenatal surveillance may be unnecessary in fetuses with suspected intrauterine growth restriction if the umbilical artery systolic/diastolic ratio and amniotic fluid volume are normal, because the complications that occur are intrapartum.

141 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A PubMed literature search to obtain an update on the etiology, diagnostic problems and therapeutic considerations of preterm delivery found calcium channel blockers and a new selective oxytocin receptor antagonist appear to be as effective as β‐sympathomimetic drugs on uterine contractions with fewer side‐effects.
Abstract: Preterm delivery is the leading factor causing neonatal mortality and morbidity. We have conducted a PubMed literature search to obtain an update on the etiology, diagnostic problems and therapeutic considerations of preterm delivery. Approximately 5-10% of all births are premature. Preterm labor is associated with preterm rupture of membranes, cervical incompetence, polyhydramnion, fetal and uterine anomalies, infections, social factors, stress, smoking, heavy work and other risk factors. The diagnosis is made on the patients presenting symptoms, clinical findings and of progressive effacement and dilatation of the cervix. Biochemical markers of preterm delivery are of minor importance in daily clinical work. Measurement of the cervix, however, is a practical and valuable tool to predict preterm delivery. Cervical cerclage can be useful in selected cases. Antibiotics may help to prevent preterm labor in cases of known etiologic agents (e.g. preterm rupture of membranes and urinary infection). The use of tocolytic agents such as beta-sympathetic receptor stimulators can be advocated for a few days. There is evidence that their long-term use is not beneficial and could even be harmful to the fetus. Calcium channel blockers (nifedipine) and a new selective oxytocin receptor antagonist, atosiban, appear to be as effective as beta-sympathomimetic drugs on uterine contractions with fewer side-effects. Prostaglandin synthetase inhibitors such as indomethacin may prevent uterine contractions and can be used prior to the 32nd week of pregnancy. A single course of corticosteroid treatment in two doses of 12 mg betamethasone or 6 mg of dexamethasone is important for the prevention of respiratory distress between the 24th and 34th weeks of pregnancy. Multiple doses may be harmful and should be avoided. In these cases management should depend on gestation age (fetal maturity). Uterine contractions after 34 weeks' gestation are not an indication for tocolytic treatment.

141 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the placenta of 200 white European, normal term babies was studied and the expression levels of four imprinted genes, the paternally expressed insulin growth factor 2 (IGF2), the mesoderm-specific transcript isoform 1 (MEST), the maternally expressing pleckstrin homology-like domain, family A, member 2 (PHLDA2), and the polymorphically imprinted insulin-like growth factor (IIG2R) gene were all known to have roles in fetal growth and were studied in the pl
Abstract: The identification of genes that regulate fetal growth will help establish the reasons for intrauterine growth restriction. Most autosomal genes are expressed biallelically, but some are imprinted, expressed only from one parental allele. Imprinted genes are associated with fetal growth and development. The growth of the fetus in utero relies on effective nutrient transfer from the mother to the fetus via the placenta. Some current research on the genetic control of fetal growth has focused on genes that display imprinted expression in utero. The expression levels of four imprinted genes, the paternally expressed insulin growth factor 2 (IGF2), the mesoderm-specific transcript isoform 1 (MEST); the maternally expressed pleckstrin homology-like domain, family A, member 2 (PHLDA2); and the polymorphically imprinted insulin-like growth factor 2 (IGF2R) gene are all known to have roles in fetal growth and were studied in the placentae of 200 white European, normal term babies. The quantitative expression analysis with real-time PCR showed the maternally expressing PHLDA2 but not the paternally expressing IGF2 and MEST, nor the polymorphic maternally expressing IGF2R placental levels to have a statistically significant effect on birth weight. PHLDA2 expression levels are negatively correlated with size at birth. These data implicate PHLDA2 as an imprinted gene important in fetal growth and also as a potential marker of fetal growth.

141 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Brief asphyxia results in significant and delayed entry of ·OH into the extracellular space of cortical gray matter in the fetal sheep brain, and melatonin given to the mother at the time of the insult abrogates this increase.
Abstract: Oxygen free radicals, including the highly toxic hydroxyl radical (·OH), initiate lipid peroxidation and DNA/RNA fragmentation and damage cells. The pineal hormone melatonin is an antioxidant and powerful scavenger of ·OH. We hypothesized that maternally administered melatonin could reduce ·OH formation, lipid peroxidation, and DNA/RNA damage in the fetal brain in response to asphyxia. In 15 fetal sheep, extracellular ·OH was measured by microdialysis in white and gray matter of the parasagittal cortex. In 10 fetuses, asphyxia was induced by umbilical cord occlusion for 10 min using an inflatable cuff – the ewes of these fetuses received either intravenous melatonin (1 mg bolus, then 1 mg/h for 2 h; n = 5) or vehicle (1% ethanol in saline; n = 5), and results were compared to fetuses with sham cord occlusion and vehicle-infused ewes (n = 5). Hypoxemia, acidemia, hypertension and bradycardia produced by cord occlusion was similar in the melatonin- and vehicle-treated groups. In the vehicle-treated group, cord occlusion resulted in a significant increase in ·OH in gray matter at 8–9.5 h after occlusion (p ·OH change in the melatonin-treated group. After cord occlusion, lipid peroxidation (4-hydroxynonenal immunoreactivity) found throughout the brain of vehicle-infused ewes was significantly less in the melatonin-infused group. Melatonin had no significant effect on the distribution of DNA/RNA fragmentation, as shown by 8-hydroxydeoxyguanosine immunoreactivity. Thus, brief asphyxia results in significant and delayed entry of ·OH into the extracellular space of cortical gray matter in the fetal sheep brain, and melatonin given to the mother at the time of the insult abrogates this increase. Melatonin, in reducing O2 free radical production, may be an effective neuroprotective treatment for the fetus.

141 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Findings indicate that physiologic levels of estrogen cause upregulation of COX-1 expression and PGI2 synthesis in fetal PAEC via activation of PAEC ER, and this process may play a critical role in optimizing the capacity for P GI2-mediated pulmonary vasodilation at birth.
Abstract: Prostacyclin (PGI2) is a key mediator of pulmonary vasodilation in the perinatal period and its synthesis in the pulmonary vasculature increases markedly during late gestation due to enhanced expression of the rate-limiting enzyme cyclooxygenase-1 (COX-1). The hormone estrogen may play a role in COX-1 upregulation since fetal estrogen levels rise dramatically during late gestation and estrogen enhances PGI2 synthesis in nonpulmonary vascular cells. We therefore studied the direct effects of estrogen on COX-1 expression in ovine fetal pulmonary artery endothelial cells (PAEC). Exposure to estradiol-17beta (E2beta, 10(-)10 to 10(-)6 M) caused a dose-related increase in COX-1 mRNA expression that was evident after 48 h and maximal at 10(-)8 M (fourfold increase). COX-1 mRNA stability was unchanged, suggesting that the upregulation is mediated at the level of transcription. E2beta treatment (10(-)8 M for 48 h) also caused a threefold increase in COX-1 protein expression and a threefold increase in PGI2 synthesis stimulated by bradykinin, the calcium ionophore A23187, or arachidonic acid. The estrogen receptor (ER) antagonist ICI 182,780 fully reversed the effects of the hormone on COX-1 protein expression and on arachidonic acid-stimulated PGI2 synthesis, and ER expression was evident in the PAEC by immunoblot analysis. These findings indicate that physiologic levels of estrogen cause upregulation of COX-1 expression and PGI2 synthesis in fetal PAEC via activation of PAEC ER. This process may play a critical role in optimizing the capacity for PGI2-mediated pulmonary vasodilation at birth, and it may also be involved in estrogen responsiveness in other vascular beds.

141 citations


Network Information
Related Topics (5)
Pregnancy
163.9K papers, 4M citations
94% related
Gestational age
31.6K papers, 974.3K citations
91% related
Birth weight
33.1K papers, 1.1M citations
86% related
Low birth weight
27.9K papers, 944.6K citations
85% related
Estrogen
40.7K papers, 1.7M citations
82% related
Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20249
20232,267
20224,825
2021623
2020515
2019506