Author:
Reini Seth A,Dutta Garima,Wood Charles E,Keller-Wood Maureen
Abstract
Previous studies have demonstrated that modest, physiologically relevant increases in maternal cortisol in late gestation result in enlargement of the fetal heart. In this study, we investigated the role of mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) or glucocorticoid receptor (GR) in this enlargement. Ewes with single fetuses were randomly assigned at ∼120 days of gestation to one of four groups: maternal cortisol infusion (1 mg/kg per day, cortisol); maternal cortisol infusion with fetal intrapericardial infusion of the MR antagonist (MRa) potassium canrenoate (600 μg/day; cortisol+MRa); maternal cortisol infusion with fetal intrapericardial infusion of the GR antagonist (GRa) mifepristone (50 μg/day, cortisol+GRa); and maternal saline infusion (control). At ∼130 days of gestation, fetal heart to body weight ratio and right ventricular (RV) and left ventricular (LV) free wall thicknesses were increased in the cortisol group when compared with control group. Fetal hearts from the cortisol+MRa group weighed significantly less, with thinner LV, RV, and interventricular septum walls, when compared with the cortisol group. Fetal hearts from the cortisol+GRa group had significantly thinner RV walls than the cortisol group. Fetal arterial pressure and heart rate were not different among groups at 130 days. Picrosirius red staining of fetal hearts indicated that the increased size was not accompanied by cardiac fibrosis. These results suggest that physiologic increases in maternal cortisol in late gestation induce fetal cardiac enlargement via MR and, to a lesser extent, by GR, and indicate that the enlargement is not secondary to an increase in fetal blood pressure or an increase in fibrosis within the fetal heart.
Subject
Endocrinology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
Cited by
30 articles.
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