Placental histology in clinically unexpected severe fetal acidemia at term.

Early Hum Dev

Unit of Human Pathology, Department of Health Sciences, San Paolo Hospital Medical School, University of Milano, Milano, Italy.

Published: May 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • Fetal acidemia at birth is linked to potential brain damage in newborns and requires investigation into its causes, especially in low-risk pregnancies.
  • A study was conducted comparing placental characteristics in 34 cases of severe fetal acidemia to 102 controls, focusing on umbilical artery pH at delivery.
  • While macroscopic features were similar, significant histological differences were observed, suggesting chronic hypoxia and abnormal blood flow in cases with fetal acidemia.

Article Abstract

Background: Fetal acidemia at birth is defined as a newborn condition wherein the cord blood pH value is less than 7.0. It could represent an association with newborn brain damage; therefore, it is important to investigate which conditions precipitate its occurrence. No extensive placental analysis has been performed in cases of acidotic newborns delivered from low-risk pregnancies.

Aims: To study placental characteristics in cases with severe fetal acidemia.

Study Design: Retrospective case-control study.

Subject: 34 cases, 102 controls.

Outcome Measures: Umbilical artery pH was measured at delivery from a doubly clamped portion of the cord. Placental characteristics were compared between cases with severe fetal acidemia (cord pH at birth <7.0) and controls (normal pH at birth) in term low-risk pregnancies.

Results: Macroscopic placental and umbilical cord characteristics were comparable in cases and controls whereas histological characteristics exhibited differences: diffuse villous edema, increased number of syncytial knots and villous branching abnormalities significantly affected cases more frequently than controls. Diffuse villous edema is related to fetal vascularization and associated with an increase of venous pressure; in our low-risk population, it is conceivable that these changes of fetal flow and pressure occurred in labor during the alteration of fetal heart rate. An increased number of syncytial knots and villous branching abnormalities have been previously associated with chronic placental hypoxic condition; in our low-risk population they could reflect a clinically undetectable hypoxic situation that acted during pregnancy reducing fetal resources to bear labor and delivery.

Conclusions: Placental histology provides useful information related to fetal acidemia in low-risk term pregnancy.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.earlhumdev.2015.03.004DOI Listing

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