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 Article
TL;DR: It is concluded that meconium-induced vascular necrosis seems to be a meaningful, detrimental lesion that represents preceding vasocontraction and fetal hypoperfusion.

129 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results indicate that maternal ghrelin regulates fetal development during the late stages of pregnancy, and active immunization of mothers against gh Relin decreased fetal body weight during pregnancy.
Abstract: Ghrelin, an acylated peptide serving as an endogenous ligand for GH secretagogue receptor (GHS-R), was originally isolated from rat and human stomach. In this study, we report the critical role of maternal ghrelin in fetal development. High levels of ghrelin receptor (GHS-R) mRNA were detected in various peripheral fetal tissues beginning at embryonic d 14 and lasting until birth. Fetal GHS-R expression was also confirmed in fetal tissues by immunohistochemistry. Autoradiography revealed that both des-acyl ghrelin and acyl ghrelin bind to fetal tissues. Chronic treatment of mothers with ghrelin resulted in a significant increase in birth weight in comparison to newborns from saline-treated mothers. Even when maternal food intake after ghrelin treatment was restricted through paired feeding, significant stimulation of fetal development still occurred. Conversely, active immunization of mothers against ghrelin decreased fetal body weight during pregnancy. A single ghrelin injection into the mother increased...

129 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the first appearance of GnRH in the fetal brain, the expression of the GnRH receptors, and the presence of immunoreactive GriRH-like material could be detected in rat placental tissue throughout gestation.
Abstract: Although it is known that LH secretion starts at 17 days of gestation in the fetal rat and that this first LH release is most likely driven by hypothalamic GnRH, an earlier role for GnRH during fetal life has been postulated with the observation that presence of GnRH is important before day 13 of gestation for the differentiation of the pituitary anlage. In order to clarify the different roles of GnRH during fetal life, we have studied the first appearance of GnRH in the fetal brain, the expression of GnRH receptors in the fetal pituitary gland, and the presence of GnRH immunoreactivity within the fetal gonadotrophs. GnRH was present in the earliest brain tissue examined (12 days of gestation). From 12–17 days, GnRH content of fetal brain remained low and then increased markedly by the end of gestation. No immunoreactive GriRH-like material could be detected in rat placental tissue throughout gestation. Binding sites for GnRH were detected as early as 12 days of gestation in fetal pituitary glands. Howeve...

129 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In the lung, the PA and PV are dissociated in their timing and pattern of branching, and early veins are present diffusely through the mesenchyme and establish central luminal connection to the main pulmonary vein before airway or artery are present at this level.
Abstract: Recently, we have identified in the mouse three processes involved in the early development of pulmonary vasculature: angiogenesis for branching of central vessels, vasculogenesis (lakes in the mesenchyme) for peripheral vessels, and a lytic process to establish luminal connection between the two. We have established that these three processes also operate in the human by studying serial sections of human embryos and early fetuses. Vascular lakes of hematopoietic cells appear at stage 13, i.e., 4+ weeks gestational age (GA), the first intrapulmonary vascular structure to appear. At stage 20 (50.5 days GA), a venous network with luminal connections to central pulmonary veins (PV) is present. Airways have not yet reached these regions of lung. At its first intrapulmonary appearance, the pulmonary artery (PA) is small and thick walled: it runs with the airway but its branching is slower, so many peripheral airways are not accompanied by a PA branch. By contrast, the PV has a peripheral patent network well before the PA. In the pseudoglandular phase, airway branching continues, and the PA catches up so that small PA branches are found with all airways. Later in this phase small nonmuscular vessels lie in the mesenchyme close to airway epithelium. By the early canalicular phase and the age of viability, continuity between pulmonary artery and the peripheral capillary network must be established. In a 10-week fetus several structures suggesting a breakthrough site were seen. Air-blood barrier structure is first seen at 19 weeks. Thus in the lung, the PA and PV are dissociated in their timing and pattern of branching. Early veins are present diffusely through the mesenchyme and establish central luminal connection to the main pulmonary vein before airway or artery are present at this level.

128 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The overall lipid metabolism in normal and gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) pregnancies is reviewed and the increase in body fat in neonates of GDM women is a risk factor for obesity in early childhood and later life.
Abstract: Maternal lipids are strong determinants of fetal fat mass. Here we review the overall lipid metabolism in normal and gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) pregnancies. During early pregnancy, the increase in maternal fat depots is facilitated by insulin, followed by increased adipose tissue breakdown and subsequent hypertriglyceridemia, mainly as a result of insulin resistance (IR) and estrogen effects. The response to diabetes is variable as a result of greater IR but decreased estrogen levels. The vast majority of fatty acids (FAs) in the maternal circulation are esterified and associated with lipoproteins. These are taken up by the placenta and hydrolyzed by lipases. The released FAs enter various metabolic routes and are released into fetal circulation. Although these determinants are modified in maternal GDM, the fetus does not seem to receive more FAs than in non-GDM pregnancies. Long-chain polyunsaturated FAs are essential for fetal development and are obtained from the mother. Mitochondrial FA oxidation occurs in fetal tissue and in placenta and contributes to energy production. Fetal fat accretion during the last weeks of gestation occurs very rapidly and is sustained not only by FAs crossing the placenta, but also by fetal lipogenesis. Fetal hyperinsulinemia in GDM mothers promotes excess accretion of adipose tissue, which gives rise to altered adipocytokine profiles. Fetal lipoproteins are low at birth, but the GDM effects are unclear. The increase in body fat in neonates of GDM women is a risk factor for obesity in early childhood and later life.

128 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