AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores how maternal psychosocial stress affects the fetus, focusing on the role of cortisol and catecholamines (like norepinephrine) in this process.
  • Pregnant sheep were used as subjects, and during 2 hours of induced stress, it was observed that maternal stress led to increased cortisol and norepinephrine levels, which decreased uterine blood flow and affected fetal metabolism.
  • The findings suggest that catecholamines contribute to the transfer of stress from mother to fetus by reducing blood flow, which could have long-term health implications for the developing fetus, emphasizing the importance of managing maternal stress during early pregnancy.

Article Abstract

Objective: We sought to evaluate whether in addition to cortisol, catecholamines also transfer psychosocial stress indirectly to the fetus by decreasing uterine blood flow (UBF) and increasing fetal anaerobic metabolism and stress hormones.

Study Design: Seven pregnant sheep chronically instrumented with uterine ultrasound flow probes and catheters at 0.77 gestation underwent 2 hours of psychosocial stress by isolation. We used adrenergic blockade with labetalol to examine whether decreased UBF is catecholamine mediated and to determine to what extent stress transfer from mother to fetus is catecholamine dependent.

Results: Stress induced transient increases in maternal cortisol and norepinephrine (NE). Maximum fetal plasma cortisol concentrations were 8.1 ± 2.1% of those in the mother suggesting its maternal origin. In parallel to the maternal NE increase, UBF decreased by maximum 22% for 30 minutes (P < .05). Fetal NE remained elevated for >2 hours accompanied by a prolonged blood pressure increase (P < .05). Fetuses developed a delayed and prolonged shift toward anaerobic metabolism in the presence of an unaltered oxygen supply. Adrenergic blockade prevented the stress-induced UBF decrease and, consequently, the fetal NE and blood pressure increase and the shift toward anaerobic metabolism.

Conclusion: We conclude that catecholamine-induced decrease of UBF is a mechanism of maternal-fetal stress transfer. It may explain the influence of maternal stress on fetal development and on programming of adverse health outcomes in later life especially during early pregnancy when fetal glucocorticoid receptor expression is limited.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ajog.2015.07.020DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

stress transfer
12
stress
8
maternal-fetal stress
8
psychosocial stress
8
anaerobic metabolism
8
adrenergic blockade
8
blood pressure
8
pressure increase
8
shift anaerobic
8
fetal
6

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!