Uteroplacenta and Fetal Physiology
umbilical arteries -how many? -what kind of blood?path? -branches from what? -what doe they feed?
-2 arteries/paired -carries deoxygenated blood from fetus to placenta -branches of the fetal internal iliac arteries -feed placental villi
Double Bohr Effect
-CO2 transfer b/t mom and fetus makes maternal blood more acidic and fetal blood more alkalotic -changes in pH cause shifts in maternal/fetal oxyHb dissociation curves -allows maternal O2 transfer to fetus
umbilical vein
-carries oxygenated blood from placenta -travels through liver and joins the hepatic vein/IVC→ RA
-what type of alveoli produce surfactant? -at what gestation are these alveoli formed? -at what gestation does surfactant production begin?
-cuboidal alveoli -30weeks -34weeks
what can cause ↑ uterine vascular resistance? (↑uterine vascular resistance= ↓UBF)
-endogenous vasoconstrictors: catecholamines from stress, vasopression -exogenous catecholamine: epi, phenylephrin> ephedrine, high concentration LA
During gestation there is an "invasion" of ______________ arteries into the uterus which leads to ____________ of arterial ____________ __________ and loss of _______________ ability of the vessels
-spiral -loss -smooth muscle -contractile
what can cause ↓ uterine arterial pressure? (↓uterine arterial pressure = ↓ UBF)
-supine position -hemorrhage/hypovolemia -sympathetic blockade→ hypotension (spinal/epidural)
what can cause ↑ uterine venous pressure? (↑uterine venous pressure = ↓UBF)
-supine position (blocked outflow of IVC) -uterine contractions (↑intrauterine pressure) -cocaine -pushing during labor -seizures -pitocin/oxytocin (multiple contractions)
ovarian arteries: -what do they supply? -brach of what artery? -what % of BF? -where do they end?
-supply uterus -branch of abdominal aorta, below the renal artery -15% of BF to uterus -end in spiral arteries
uterine arteries: -what do they supply/ -branches of what artery? aka? -equal BF? -what % of blood flow? -where do they end?
-supply uterus -branches of anterior devision of the internal iliac artery (aka hypogastric artery) -whatever side of the uterus the placenta is embedded on will have more BF than the opposite side -85% of BF t -ends in spiral arteries
Passive transport depends on what 6 things?
1. concentration gradient 2. electrochemical gradient 3. molecular weight 4. libid solubility 5. degree of ionization 6. membrane surface area/thickness
vital functions of amniotic fluid (3)
1. facilitates fetal growth 2. cushion for fetus, allows for movement 3. defense mechanism
3 anatomic communications in fetal circulation? where are they located?
1. foramen ovale (between RA and LA) 2. ductus arteriosus (between PA and aorta) 3. ductus venosus (connects umbilical vein to hepatic vein/IVC)
primary causes of respiratory effort in a newborn?
1. hypoxia 2. acidosis 3. sensory stimulation (cord clamping, noise, pain, touch)
4 functions of placenta **IMPORTANT
1. link between mother and fetus 2. respiratory gas exchange 3. nutrient/drug transfer 4. waste exchange
6 factors that influence maternal/fetal exchange (not the same as the factors that influence transfer of medications between mother/fetus)
1. maternal and fetal blood flow 2. placental binding 3. placenta metabolism 4. diffusion capacity of what needs to cross 5. protein binding 6. gestational age
the transport of medications from mother to fetus depends on what 6 things?
1. maternal drug concentraion 2. membrane barrier to diffusion 3. placental anatomy 4. protein binding 5. uterine perfusion 6. fetal blood concentration (saying to help remember: maternal membranes place protein under flowers???)
O2 transfer across the placenta depends on what 5 factors?
1. membrane surface area 2. membrane thickness 3. partial pressure of P2 gradient between maternal/fetal blood 4. affinity of maternal and fetal Hb 5. blood flow between mother and fetus
causes of increased uterine blood flow (4)
1. neuraxial anesthetic (↓ vascular resistance) 2. treatment of chronic HTN (= increased UBF) 3. vascular remodeling of arteries= ↑vessel length, ↑ vessel diameter= ↓arterial resistance 4. ↓blood viscosity (minor ↑UBF)
4 transfer mechanisms (+1 that was not listed)
1. passive transport 2. facilitaed transport (glucose) 3. active transport (NaK ATP) 4. pinocytosis (+phagocytosis)
3 sets of arteries that supply the uterus with blood flow
1. uterine arteries (85%) 2. ovarian arteries (15%) 3. spiral arteries (deliver to intravilla space)
causes of decreased uterine blood flow (3)
1. ↓uterine arterial pressure 2. ↑uterine venous pressure 3. ↑uterine vascular resistance
umbilical blood flow at term what does regulation depend on?
100-120ml/kg/min regulation dependent on fetal catecholamines
irreversible fetal brain damage r/t hypoxemia occurs in about how many minutes?
10minutes
fetal Hb
17g/dl
3 vessels in umbilical cord - what type of blood does each carry?
2 umbilical arteries -carries deoxygentaed blood 1 umbilical vein -carries oxygenated blood
at what gestation do true alveoli develop/form?
36weeks
how many ml of reserve O2 does the fetus have?
42ml
what % of blood goes from RV to pulmonary circulation?
5%
uterine BF at baseline (non-pregnant)? uterine BF at term gestation? what % of maternal CO is this?
50-100ml/min 700-900ml/min 20% of CO
weight of placenta at term
500g
SpO2 of blood from placenta
80%
what molecular weight can pass the across the placenta via passive transport?
<600 daltons
oligohydramnios
AFI <5-6 cm (normal 8-18) **too little fluid
polyhydramnios
AFI > 20-24cm (normal 8-18) **too much fluid
AFI- - what does it stand for and what does it estimate? what is normal?
AFI= Amniotic Fluid Index -estimates amniotic fluid volume normal: 8-18cm
what changes from fetal life to neonate life are considered to be the most profound ?
CV and respiratory **if these do not transition, there is a potential for death or permanent neuro damage
does fetus depend on mother for thermoregulation? what happens if there is ↓UBF?
NO -fetus produces 2x as much heat as mom (0.5degrees C higher than mom) ↓UBF= ↑ fetal temperature
RV and LV dont have an equal EF during fetal circulation... what fraction of blood do each eject?
RV: 2/3 LV: 1/3
does the uterus autoregulate?
YES when NOT pregnant NO AUTOREGULATION WHEN PREGNANT **therefore maternal BP is CRITICAL
if mom goes into labor earlier than 34weeks, what drug is given to encourage the development of surfactant in the fetus?
betamethasone (dose once then 24h later= total of 2 doses)
what is a major determinant of transfer of CO2 between mom and fetus?
concentration gradient
where do spiral arteries deliver blood to? for what?
deliver blood to intra-villa space where nutrient, gas, and drug exchange happens
flow of deoxygenated blood from lower extremities and SVC
deoxygenated blood from IVC & SVC→ RA→ RV→ PA→ PDA→ descending aorta→ lower extremities **PDA shunts blood away from the lungs and into the aorta **blood flow from the lower extremities returns to heart via IVC OR goes back to placenta via umbilical arteries
is the placenta more permeable or less permeable in early gestation compared to late gestation?
early= more permeable late= less permeable
how is glucose transported?
facilitated transport
what transfer mechanism is noted for saturation kinetics?
facilitated transport *there is a v-max, once v-max is reached, transport doesnt happen any faster
chorionic plate
fetal side of placenta
P50 for fetal Hb vs P50 of maternal Hb
fetal: 18-19mmHg maternal: 27-30mmHg **fetal Hb has a higher affinity for O2, therefore a lower P50
fetal O2 demand adult O2 demand
fetal: 8ml/min/kg adult: 3-4ml/min/kg
how does fetus get glucose?
fetus is dependent on placental transfer from mother for all of glucose
what crosses membranes via facilitated transport? what happens when there is a higher temperature?
glucose higher temperatures will increase transfer of the agent/ion
uterus blood flow: ____________ flow through ____________ resistance circuit
high low
what is hyperemia and when does it occur during labor?
hyperemia= rapid BF back to area happens when uterus relaxes during labor-- there is ↑ perfusion every time the uterus relaxes
70-90% of uterine blood flow passes through what space? what does the remainder of BF supply?
intervillous space remainder supples myometrium/muscle of uterus
what is the space called where blood flows to allow for exchange of nutrients, gas, drugs, waste, etc.?
intervillous space terminla villi: where blood goes for exchange
relationship between UBF in labor and contraction strength relationship between UBF in labor and intrauterine pressure
inverse inverse **stronger contraction= ↓ UBF because of ↑ intrauterine pressure
basal plate
maternal side of placenta
does fetal pulmonary and systemic circulation run in sequence or parallel?
parallel
what branch of the nervous system appears first?
parasympathetic -becomes more dominant throughout pregnancy -responsible for lower HR at term than earlier in gestation
hypoxia, acidosis, hypovolemia and hypothermia may lead to prevention/reversal of circulatory change at brith which can lead to what condition? -this can become a vicious cycle because it can lead to ____ to ____ shunting, therefore causing more acidosis and hypoxia
persistant pulmonary hypertension of the newborn right to left shunting
flow of oxygenated blood from placenta
placenta→ umbilical vein→ ductus venosus→ IVC→ RA→ foramen ovale→ LA→ LV→ aorta→ upper body **30-50% (20% at term) of oxygenated blood from placenta bypasses portal circulation and goes directly into IVC
Le Chatelier's Principle
rapid movement of CO2 from fetal capillary blood to maternal blood, causing a shift in the equilibrium of the carbonic anhydrase reaction which produces more CO2 for diffusion
Oxyhemoglobin curves: maternal Hb: ______ shift fetal Hb: _______ shift
right left
s/s of persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborns? baby has an increased incidence of developing this if mom takes what medications?
s/s: -cyanosis -high O2 requirement ↑incidence: -SSRIs -NSAiDS **can lead to premature closure of PDA
what is pinocytosis? does it require energy?
transfer of large macromolecules (cell membrane invaginates the molecule and brings it in) -yes, requires energy
what arteries are often targeted for embolization when there is post-partum hemorrhage?
uterine and ovarian
______________ _____________ _____________ is one of the most important determinants of __________________ maternal/fetal exchange
uterine blood flow successful
Uterine blood flow equation
uterine perfusion pressure/ uterine vascular resistance **uterine perfusion pressure= difference between uterine arterial and venous pressures
what veins drain blood from uterus?
uterine veins
in fetal circulation, if hypoxia is encountered, _________________ is released which causes vasoconstriction and shunts blood flow to ________________ and ______________
vasopressin brain heart
what causes closure of the foramen ovale?
↑ pulmonary blood flow→ ↑LA pressure → closure of foramen ovale
what causes functional closure of the PDA? when does anatomic closure occur?
↑O2 tension→ contraction of PDA anatomic closure in 2-3weeks after delivery
increased UBF: ___ vascular resistance ___ intravascular volume ___ CO (increased or decreased)
↓vascular resistance ↑intravascular volume ↑CO
what transport mechanism requires cellular energy and can allow a substance to move against its gradient? ... what does it require to do this? ... example?
active transport -requires protein membrane carrier -ex: NaK ATP pump