Publications by authors named "Kaila Krishnamoorthy"

Introduction: Preeclampsia (PE) affects 2-8% of all pregnancies, and is the leading cause of maternal and fetal morbidity and mortality. We reported on pathophysiological changes in placenta mesenchymal stem cells (P-MSCs) in PE. P-MSCs can be isolated from different layers of the placenta at the interface between the fetus and mother.

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Background: Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency (OTCD) is a rare disorder of the urea cycle that obstetricians should be aware of in order to guide management for pregnant carriers of the X-linked gene that causes the condition.

Cases: We present the pregnancy management and outcomes of two women with OTCD. The particular manifestations of the disease drive antenatal, intrapartum and postpartum management.

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Objective: We investigated using "pulsatile vessels at the posterior bladder wall" as a novel sonographic marker to demonstrate the severity of placenta accreta spectrum (PAS).

Methods: This observational case-control study of 30 pregnant women was performed at Hackensack Meridian Health's Center for Abnormal Placentation in 2020. The case group was made up of women with historically described sonographic signs of PAS and was compared against two control groups: (1) women with uncomplicated placenta previa and (2) women with no evidence of placenta previa sonographically.

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This article is part of a Special Issue "Energy Balance". In female Syrian hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus), low circulating levels of ovarian steroids are associated with increased food hoarding and decreased sexual motivation, but these effects are exaggerated in food-restricted females. To determine whether cold ambient temperature has the same effects as food restriction, groups of hamsters were fed ad libitum while they were housed at either 5 °C or 22 °C, and then tested for behavior for 90 min on each day of the estrous cycle.

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Effects of ovarian hormones on sex and ingestive behavior are well studied, and yet, their role in diverting attention from food to sex has not been examined directly, possibly because these functions are masked under conditions of excessive food abundance typical of the laboratory. Female Syrian hamsters were either fed ad libitum or food-restricted to 75% of their ad libitum intake for 8days and then tested every day of the estrous cycle for their preference for males versus food, food hoarding and food intake in an apparatus designed to mimic aspects of their natural habitat. The food-restricted, but not the fed females, varied significantly over the estrous cycle in appetitive behaviors, which included their preference for males versus food and in the amount of food hoarded, with low food hoarding and high male preference on the night of ovulation.

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