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Achieving sustained extrauterine life: Challenges of an artificial placenta in fetal pigs as a model of the preterm human fetus

Authors :
Alex J. Charest‐Pekeski
Ayman Sheta
Luiza Taniguchi
Mark J. McVey
Alejandro Floh
Liqun Sun
Tanroop Aujla
Steven K. S. Cho
Jiaqi Ren
Lynn Crawford‐Lean
Celeste Foreman
Jessie Mei Lim
Brahmdeep S. Saini
Marvin Estrada
Anson Lam
Jaques Belik
Dariusz Mroczek
Megan Quinn
Stacey L. Holman
Jack R. T. Darby
Mike Seed
Janna L. Morrison
Christoph Haller
Source :
Physiological Reports, Vol 9, Iss 5, Pp n/a-n/a (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

Abstract Artificial placenta (AP) technology aims to maintain fetal circulation, while promoting the physiologic development of organs. Recent reports of experiments performed in sheep indicate the intrauterine environment can be recreated through the cannulation of umbilical vessels, replacement of the placenta with a low‐resistance membrane oxygenator, and incubation of the fetus in fluid. However, it remains to be seen whether animal fetuses similar in size to the extremely preterm human infant that have been proposed as a potential target for this technology can be supported in this way. Preterm Yucatan miniature piglets are similar in size to extremely preterm human infants and share similar umbilical cord anatomy, raising the possibility to serve as a good model to investigate the AP. To characterize fetal cardiovascular physiology, the carotid artery (n = 24) was cannulated in utero and umbilical vein (UV) and umbilical artery were sampled. Fetal UV flow was measured by MRI (n = 16). Piglets were delivered at 98 ± 4 days gestation (term = 115 days), cannulated, and supported on the AP (n = 12) for 684 ± 228 min (range 195–3077 min). UV flow was subphysiologic (p = .002), while heart rate was elevated on the AP compared with in utero controls (p = .0007). We observed an inverse relationship between heart rate and UV flow (r2 = .4527; p

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2051817X
Volume :
9
Issue :
5
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Physiological Reports
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.4a67c59c7e9e4625b317ec95d5376ee3
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.14814/phy2.14742