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Mechanisms of death in structurally normal stillbirths.

Authors :
Pacora, Percy
Romero, Roberto
Jaiman, Sunil
Erez, Offer
Bhatti, Gaurav
Panaitescu, Bogdan
Benshalom-Tirosh, Neta
Jung, Eun Jung
Hsu, Chaur-Dong
Hassan, Sonia S.
Yeo, Lami
Kadar, Nicholas
Source :
Journal of Perinatal Medicine; Feb2019, Vol. 47 Issue 2, p222-240, 19p, 6 Charts, 3 Graphs
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Objectives: To investigate mechanisms of in utero death in normally formed fetuses by measuring amniotic fluid (AF) biomarkers for hypoxia (erythropoietin [EPO]), myocardial damage (cardiac troponin I [cTnI]) and brain injury (glial fibrillary acidic protein [GFAP]), correlated with risk factors for fetal death and placental histopathology. Methods: This retrospective, observational cohort study included intrauterine deaths with transabdominal amniocentesis prior to induction of labor. Women with a normal pregnancy and an indicated amniocentesis at term were randomly selected as controls. AF was assayed for EPO, cTnI and GFAP using commercial immunoassays. Placental histopathology was reviewed, and CD15-immunohistochemistry was used. Analyte concentrations >90<superscript>th</superscript> centile for controls were considered "raised". Raised AF EPO, AF cTnI and AF GFAP concentrations were considered evidence of hypoxia, myocardial and brain injury, respectively. Results: There were 60 cases and 60 controls. Hypoxia was present in 88% (53/60), myocardial damage in 70% (42/60) and brain injury in 45% (27/60) of fetal deaths. Hypoxic fetuses had evidence of myocardial injury, brain injury or both in 77% (41/53), 49% (26/53) and 13% (7/53) of cases, respectively. Histopathological evidence for placental dysfunction was found in 74% (43/58) of these cases. Conclusion: Hypoxia, secondary to placental dysfunction, was found to be the mechanism of death in the majority of fetal deaths among structurally normal fetuses. Ninety-one percent of hypoxic fetal deaths sustained brain, myocardial or both brain and myocardial injuries in utero. Hypoxic myocardial injury was an attributable mechanism of death in 70% of the cases. Non-hypoxic cases may be caused by cardiac arrhythmia secondary to a cardiac conduction defect. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03005577
Volume :
47
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Perinatal Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
134406100
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1515/jpm-2018-0216