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Lecture notes

Lecture notes BIOL2018 Mammalian Birth

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Lecture notes from the BIOL2018 adaptive physiology, Mammalian Birth. Covering: Placenta, Umbilical vessels, umbilical circulation, foetal vascular system, vascular shunts, Foramen Ovale, Ductus arteriosus, Ductus venosus and heart muscle development.

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  • December 11, 2023
  • 6
  • 2021/2022
  • Lecture notes
  • Herman wijnen
  • Biol2018 mammalian birth
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olivereames
Mammalian Birth
Changes required at birth
 Requirement for specific and fully organised neurological/reflex pathways
 Hormonal function (cf steroids – most peptide hormones cant cross the placenta)
 Epidermal function (barriers)

Loss of placenta impacts on:
 Heat generation (Changes from requiring to loose – to needing to maintain)
 Intestinal function (increases and becomes critical for life) – movement (including
suckling) – digestion – absorption
 Liver function (increases and becomes critical for life)
 Renal function (excretion and increased resorption of ions/glucose and becomes
critical for life)
 Lung function (starts and becomes critical for life)
 Cardiovascular changes (driven by need for above)

Roles of the placentra
 Transfer of gases – O2/CO2
 Transfer of nutrients – Glucose, AA, triglycerides – transporters (NB no transfer of
triglyceride directly – triglycerides absorbed and lipase in fetal placental cells
releases FAs)
 Transfer of urea and NH3 (latter sent to maternal liver/kidney), uric acid, creatinine
 Heat transfer sink
 Transfer of IgG to foetus (specific) – transfer across the syncytiotrrophoblasts of the
chronic villi mediated by the neonatal Fc receptor, FcRn and endocytosis
 Circulatory reservoir
 Immune modulator of foetus – active suppression of host-vs-graft eraction
 Hormone production – chorionic gonadotropin (maintains the corpus luteum) –
progesterones – CRH/oestrogens – Placental lactogen (increases maternal serum
glucose) – prostaglandins (nb normally auto or paracrine)

Placenta issues
1. before birth we must retain the umbilical vessel patent
2. At birth we must transfer blood to the foetus from the placenta
3. We must then close the placental circulation
 Approx. 33% of all neonates placental blood volume is in the placenta – its loss
would be dangerous for the baby
 Approx. 30% transfuses in the first 15 seconds after birth
 Approx. 60% transfuses over following the 2-3 minutes
 Caused by the positional differences and contractions of the uterus to express the
placenta immediately after birth create a pressure gradient between the placenta
and the neonate

, Umbilical vessels
 Umbilical arteries do not possess an internal elastic membrane and contain little
elastin, in general, while the vein contains an elastic layer but no valves
 The arteries also lack the adventitia seen in cardiovascular vessel – instead, rigid
Wharton’s jelly performs the function of the adventitia
 Wharton’s jelly is a gel-like porous ECM – the fibrous scaffold is made of collagen and
elastin – the pours contain proteoglycans, (mainly versican) and hyaluronic acid that
bind water to form a viscous fluid – this is held by an outer epithelial layer
continuous with the amniotic epithelium
 The jelly contributes to the firmness of the intact cord
 Two umbilical arteries coil around the vein in a helical fashion
 Blood flows in a pulsatile manner from the foetus to placenta through the arteries
 A small pulse remains in the more passive transfer of blood back to the foetus
through the umbilical vein
 Umbilical coiling appears to confer turgor to the umbilical unit – producing a cord
that is strong but flexible – low umbilical coiling index is an indicator of adverse
perinatal outcome
 Wharton’s jelly surrounding the foetal vessels can withstand torsional and
compressional forces
 Occasionally, Wharton’s jelly does not develop in all portions of the cord – at this
point the foetal vessels are no longer protected from torsional closure
 The lining endothelial cells of the umbilical vessels are highly metabolically active
and form two major dilatory factors PGE2 (other vessels esp heart endothelia form
PGI2) and NO

Before birth patent/relaxed umbilical circulation
 Maintained through gestation
 No nervous input to placental vasculature
 Little effect of catecholamines
 The contractility of smooth muscles in vessel walls is influenced by paracrine signals
produced by the neighbouring endothelial cells
 PGE2 and NO
 NO – expression driven by shear flow and endothelin, Bradkinin and atrial natriuretic
peptide – all-cause vasodilation s umbilical arteries relaxed and patent

At birth umbilical circulation closes
 40-60s – reduction of blood flow by 80%
1. Reduction of PGE2 synthase in vessels – umbilical arteries earlier than vein
2. Local mediators (induces constriction lasting 2-3hrs) – increased local thromboxane –
increased serotonin
3. Stretching of umbilical cord can cause spasm
4. Cooling to 18oC (short term 10-20 mins effect)
5. High external oxygen tensions (closes the artery, not the vein)
 All leads to clamping of the vessels – functionally closed within 2-3mins of birth

Placental vessels summary
 Retained open during pregnancy

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