Author:
Antipatis Christos,Grant George,Ashworth Cheryl J.
Abstract
Vitamin A deficiency during pregnancy is associated with detrimental
effects in the offspring. We have developed a rat model to examine specific
effects of maternal vitamin A status on perinatal growth and development. A
total of 54 female rats were fed a vitamin A-free (VAF), -marginal (VAM) or
-sufficient (VAS) diet from weaning until mating (at 7 weeks) and throughout
pregnancy. Half of the rats in each group were injected with a single large
dose of vitamin A on day 10 of pregnancy. Fetal and neonatal samples were
taken on day 20 of pregnancy and the day of birth respectively. Maternal
plasma retinol concentrations on day 20 and at birth were 50 % and 30 %
lower in the VAF and VAM when compared to the VAS group. Fetal weight and
survival did not differ between groups although placental: fetal ratio was
higher in the VAF group than in the VAS group (0·195 (SE 0·005)
V. 0·175 (se 0·004),
P < 0·05). Rats fed the VAF diet gave
birth at 23·5 d, an average of 1 d later than the other groups, and had
lower number of live neonates at birth. Fetal liver, heart and lung weights
relative to total body weight were lower in the VAF group and had altered
growth trajectories. In neonates, only the relative lung weight was reduced.
In addition, an increased protein: DNA ratio indicated hypertrophy in fetal
kidneys. Vitamin A injection had no additional effect on length of gestation
and fetal or neonatal number. However, injection increased relative fetal
organ weights in the VAF group but did not alter the effects of vitamin A
deficiency in the neonate. These data suggest that chronic vitamin A
deficiency during pregnancy compromises liver, heart and kidney and impairs
lung growth and development during the last few days of gestation and
reduces number of live neonates at birth.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Nutrition and Dietetics,Medicine (miscellaneous)
Cited by
25 articles.
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