Objective: Placental lesions and placental ischemia are typical elements of intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR). The aim of this study is to analyze histological and immunohistochemical (IHC) changes in the placentas of IUGR fetuses.

Materials And Methods: In this prospective study, 126 placentas from small for gestational age (SGA) pregnancies (newborns with birth weight <10th percentile) that formed the study group and 31 placentas from pregnancies without SGA representing control group, were included. Placentas were examined according to standard protocol. Histopathological and IHC examinations of placentas were performed for analysis.

Results: A certain type of lesion of placental injury is increased in placentas from SGA pregnancies. These placental lesions were placental infarction (over 5%), increased syncytial knots, intervillous fibrinoid deposition, villous thrombohematoma. Other common placental lesions were probably related to fetal adaptation to placental ischemia or represent a placental change characteristic of pregnancy evolution.

Conclusions: It seems that although IUGR∕SGA fetuses are more commonly associated with histological placental abnormalities, it cannot be established whether these abnormalities certainly contribute to IUGR, as there are no specific placental lesions in SGA placentas. Pseudo-angiomatous aspect, associated with increased syncytial knots, was specific for vascular hypoxia. Especially the magnitude of modifications of the placental structure beyond the qualitative modifications, which also lead to functional changes, are involved in this pathology of pregnancy, the onset of lesions being triggered at the level of stem villi.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

placental findings
4
findings pregnancies
4
pregnancies complicated
4
complicated iugr
4
iugr histopathological
4
histopathological immunohistochemical
4
immunohistochemical analysis
4
analysis objective
4
objective placental
4
placental lesions
4

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!