Publications by authors named "Christiane Gam"

Article Synopsis
  • - The study aimed to develop a predictive model for labor dystocia, a complication that can arise during childbirth, as current tools for predicting this risk are lacking.
  • - Researchers focused on nulliparous women giving birth in a Danish hospital, utilizing data from multiple sources to analyze various predictors like maternal age and pre-pregnancy BMI through logistic regression.
  • - The final model, based on 12,445 women and featuring six predictors, showed a 62.3% ability to distinguish between those who experienced labor dystocia and those who did not, indicating potential for further refinement and external validation.
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Aims: Poor myometrial contractility has been demonstrated in women at term with diabetes and decreased muscular mitochondrial content and/or function has been extensively implicated in the progression of type 2 diabetes. Alterations of the uterine mitochondrial phenotype in pregnant women with diabetes have yet to be investigated as a causal link to decreased myometrial contractility.

Methods: Observational study of 18 women with diabetes (type 2 and gestational) scheduled for an elective Caesarean section at term with matching controls.

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Key Points: Obesity during pregnancy and childbirth is associated with labour dystocia leading to instrumental or operative delivery, but the underlying pathophysiological mechanisms remain unclear and insufficient uterine contractility has been suggested. This study examined whether reduced myometrial mitochondrial capacity or quantity could contribute as a pathophysiological mechanism to labour dystocia. Data did not support reduced myometrial mitochondrial capacity or quantity in the myometrium at term in obese women, but a reduced myocyte density with increased triglyceride content was demonstrated, which could lead to poorer uterine contractility.

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Laboring women with elevated body mass index (BMI) have an increased risk of inefficient uterine labor contractions, and despite the significance of mitochondria in the production of energy to drive uterine contractions, mitochondrial function in the myometrium with reference to the BMI has not been explored. The objective of this study was to determine whether obesity prior to and during gestation affects oxidative capacity and/or morphology of mitochondria in the myometrium at term in an animal model. Rat dams were fed for 47 days prior to impregnation and during gestation with either (1) a regular chow diet, (2) a low-fat high-carbohydrate diet, or (3) a high-fat low-carbohydrate diet (n = 10 in each group).

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Objective: To test whether the relatively unpredictable nature of labour onset can be described by the Poisson distribution.

Design: A descriptive retrospective study.

Setting: From the Danish Birth Registry, we identified births from all seven obstetric clinics in the capital region of Denmark (n=211 290) between 2000 and the end of 2009.

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The platelet count varies two-fold among healthy individuals. Considering the haemostatic role of platelets, this study evaluated the relation between cardiovascular and metabolic responses to uncontrolled haemorrhage and the pretrauma platelet count in pigs. A laceration liver injury was inflicted in 19 pigs (34 ± 3 kg; mean ± SD).

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In a sheep model, we investigated diet effects on skeletal muscle mitochondria to look for fetal programming. During pregnancy, ewes were fed normally (N) or were 50% food restricted (L) during the last trimester, and lambs born to these ewes received a normal (N) or a high-fat diet (H) for the first 6 mo of life. We examined mitochondrial function in permeabilized muscle fibers from the lambs at 6 mo of age (adolescence) and after 24 mo of age (adulthood).

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Background: Decreased cerebral metabolic ratio (CMR) [molar uptake of O(2) versus molar uptake of (glucose + (1/2) lactate)] during exercise is attenuated by intravenous administration of the non-selective beta-adrenergic receptor antagonist propranolol. We evaluated to what extent cirrhotic patients in oral treatment with propranolol are able to mobilize brain non-oxidative carbohydrate metabolism.

Methods: Incremental cycle ergometry to exhaustion (86 +/- 4.

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