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Publication : Site-specific increases in utero- and fetoplacental arterial vascular resistance in eNOS-deficient mice due to impaired arterial enlargement.

First Author  Rennie MY Year  2015
Journal  Biol Reprod Volume  92
Issue  2 Pages  48
PubMed ID  25519187 Mgi Jnum  J:329613
Mgi Id  MGI:6868642 Doi  10.1095/biolreprod.114.123968
Citation  Rennie MY, et al. (2015) Site-specific increases in utero- and fetoplacental arterial vascular resistance in eNOS-deficient mice due to impaired arterial enlargement. Biol Reprod 92(2):48
abstractText  The sites of elevated vascular resistance that impede placental perfusion in pathological pregnancies are unknown. In the current study, we identified these sites in a knockout mouse model (eNOS(-/-)) with reduced uterine (-55%) and umbilical (-29%) artery blood flows caused by endothelial nitric oxide synthase deficiency. Uteroplacental and fetoplacental arterial vascular trees of pregnant mice near term were imaged using x-ray microcomputed tomography (n = 5-10 placentas from 3-5 dams/group). The resulting three-dimensional images were analyzed to assess vessel geometry and vascular resistance. In control and eNOS(-/-) trees, approximately 90% of total uteroplacental vascular resistance was located in the radial arteries. Changes in eNOS(-/-) vessel geometry, including 30% reductions in uterine, radial, and spiral artery diameters, were calculated to increase arterial resistance downstream of the uterine artery by 2.3-fold, predicting a 57% decrease in uterine blood flow. Despite large reductions in eNOS(-/-) spiral arteries (-55% by volume) and maternal canals (-67% by volume), these vessels were relatively minor contributors to resistance. In the eNOS(-/-) fetoplacental tree, the number of arterioles (50-75 mum diameter) increased by 26%. Nevertheless, calculated resistance rose by 19%, predominantly because arteries near the periphery of the tree selectively exhibited a 7%-9% diameter reduction. We conclude that previously observed decreases in uterine and umbilical blood flows in eNOS(-/-) pregnancies are associated with markedly divergent structural changes in the uteroplacental versus fetoplacental circulations. Results showed the radial arteries were critical determinants of uteroplacental resistance in mice and therefore warrant greater attention in future studies in pathological human pregnancies.
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