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Plasma concentration, urinary excretion and renal clearance of free, total and esterified L-carnitine were monitored monthly in 14 women during the last 6 months of pregnancy and 1 month after delivery. Plasma concentration and renal clearance measured 1 month after delivery overlapped with normal values for females of comparable age, and were considered the reference values for further comparisons. Plasma concentration of free, total and esterified L-carnitine decreased during pregnancy, reaching values as low as half of those measured 1 month after delivery, whereas urinary excretion and renal clearance, mainly of L-carnitine esters, increased, with renal clearance reaching a peak at the 16th week of pregnancy. Pregnancy thus leads to a reversible secondary deficiency of L-carnitine. The involvement of L-carnitine in the excretion of an excess of acyl-S-coenzyme A groups to prevent a possible systemic acidosis, as well as hormonal changes and a reduction of L-carnitine biosynthesis, could play a significant role in the variations in L-carnitine metabolism encountered in pregnancy. As physiological components of L-carnitine are excreted via a saturable tubular reabsorption, their threshold seems to follow plasma concentration, even when they decrease markedly, as in pregnancy.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/09513599409058032DOI Listing

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