Abstract
Important fetal and perinatal pathologies, especially intrauterine
growth restriction (IUGR), are thought to stem from placental
hypoxia-induced vasoconstriction of the fetoplacental vessels,
leading to placental hypoperfusion and thus fetal undernutrition.
However, the effects of hypoxia on the fetoplacental vessels have
been surprisingly little studied. We review here available
experimental data on acute hypoxic fetoplacental
vasoconstriction (HFPV) and on chronic hypoxic elevation of
fetoplacental vascular resistance. The mechanism of HFPV
includes hypoxic inhibition of potassium channels in the plasma
membrane of fetoplacental vascular smooth muscle and
consequent membrane depolarization that activates voltage
gated calcium channels. This in turn causes calcium influx and
contractile apparatus activation. The mechanism of chronic
hypoxic elevation of fetoplacental vascular resistance is virtually
unknown except of signs of the involvement of morphological
remodeling.
Publisher
Institute of Physiology of the Czech Academy of Sciences
Subject
General Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
31 articles.
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