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Elevated circulating and placental SPINT2 is associated with placental insufficiency
Placenta, 2021No description ...
Murphy, Ciara +13 more
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Placental Gene Expression in a Rat ‘Model’ of Placental Insufficiency
Placenta, 2010Placental insufficiency is a major factor associated with pregnancy complications such as miscarriages, intrauterine growth restriction and pre-eclampsia. Recent studies have identified the Brown Norway (BN) rat as a natural 'model' of placental insufficiency associated with decreased trophoblast remodeling of maternal uterine arteries.Genetic pathways
R, Goyal +3 more
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Placental insufficiency and its consequences
European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology, 2003Placental insufficiency is a process leading to progressive deterioration in placental function and a decrease in transplacental transfer of oxygen and nutrients to the fetus. The resulting fetal hypoxemia is the major stimulus involved in the reduction in fetal growth as an attempt to reduce metabolic demands by the growing fetus.
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Placental insufficiency and the small-for-dates baby
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1972Abstract A blind prospective pathologic survey of the placenta, designed to detect cases of placental insufficiency, was carried out during 1970, with the use of a scoring system involving over 7 main parameters. An 80 per cent correlation with the pediatric assessment of the baby was obtained. The system was then reassessed statistically, and scores
J M, Scott, J M, Jordan
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Leptin: A Potential Marker of Placental Insufficiency
Gynecologic and Obstetric Investigation, 2003To investigate placental leptin production in placental insufficiency, placental leptin production was measured in women with severe preeclampsia (group 1) and in normotensive pregnancies associated with intrauterine growth restriction (group 2), compared to controls (group 3).
Jacques, Lepercq +4 more
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The Fetal Response to Chronic Placental Insufficiency
Seminars in Perinatology, 2008Fetal growth restriction is most commonly caused by failure of the placenta to meet the increasing demands for oxygen and substrate of the developing fetus, resulting in common fetal compensatory responses. Understanding these responses is helpful in developing a management strategy that will optimize pregnancy outcome.
Mark G, Neerhof, Larry G, Thaete
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The Effect of Fluorocarbon Emulsion on Placental Insufficiency
1989Oxygen-carrying plasma substitutes based on emulsified perfluorocarbons (PFCs) have undergone extensive experimental and clinical evaluation over the last 10 years. Though they were originally introduced as “artificial blood”, it is clear that their use will probably be largely in more specialised areas such as improvement of microcirculatory ...
N S, Faithfull, H W, Marshall
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[Prematurity and placental insufficiency].
Zentralblatt fur Gynakologie, 1982The authors analysed 1,528 "genuine" single premature births, between the 28th and 36th weeks of pregnancy and over a period between 1975 and 1979, with the view to establishing clinical manifestations of nutritive, respiratory, and hormonosynthetic disorders of the placenta as possible causes of prematurity.
K E, Ruckhäberle +4 more
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