Abstract

BackgroundChorangiosis is a vascular change involving the terminal chorionic villi in the placenta. It results from longstanding, low-grade hypoxia in the placental tissue, and is associated with such conditions as intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR), diabetes, and gestational hypertension in pregnancy. Chorangiosis rarely occurs in normal pregnancies. However, its prevalence is 5–7% of all placentas from infants admitted to newborn intensive care units. The present study was aimed at determining the association of chorangiosis with pregnancy complications and perinatal outcomes.MethodsIn this case-control study, 308 chorangiosis cases were compared with 308 controls (with other diagnoses in pathology) in terms of maternal, placental, prenatal, and neonatal characteristics derived from the medical records of participants retrospectively. R and SPSS version 22 software tools were used, and the statistical significance level was considered 0.05 for all the tests.ResultsPreeclampsia, diabetes mellitus, maternal hemoglobin, maternal hematocrit, C/S, oligohydramnios, fetal anomaly, dead neonates, NICU admissions were significantly higher in the chorangiosis group OR = 1.6, 3.98, 1.68, 1.92, 2.1, 4.47, 4.22, 2.9, 2.46, respectively (p-value< 0.05 for all). Amniotic fluid index, birth weight, cord PH amount, 1st, and 5th Apgar score was lower in the chorangiosis group OR = 0.31, 1, 0.097, 0.83, 0.85, respectively (p-value< 0.05 for all). Moreover, fundal placenta, retro placental hemorrhage, perivillous fibrin deposition, calcification, and acute chorioamnionitis were higher in the chorangiosis group OR = 2.1, 11.8, 19.96, 4.05, and 6.38 respectively, (p-value< 0.05). There was a high agreement between the two pathologists, and the power of the study was estimated at 99%.ConclusionAlthough chorangiosis is an uncommon condition, it is associated with a higher incidence of perinatal and neonatal morbidity and mortality. Therefore, it should be considered an important clinical sign of adverse pregnancy outcomes and should be reported in the pathology evaluation.

Highlights

  • Chorangiosis is a vascular change involving the terminal chorionic villi in the placenta

  • There were 308 cases diagnosed with chorangiosis, and 308 other placenta complications controls in the study

  • The maternal age and gestational age were lower in the chorangiosis group (29.4 ± 5.8, 30.3 ± 5.48 and 35.09 ± 4.10, 36.5 ± 3.49, respectively, and P-value< 0.05 for both)

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Summary

Introduction

Chorangiosis is a vascular change involving the terminal chorionic villi in the placenta. The placenta, as the largest organ of fetal origin, plays an essential role in fetal development and function from implantation to delivery and affects maternal function during pregnancy. In this regard, histological examination of the placenta provides a wide range of specific information about the nature, cause, and timing of injuries to both the fetus and mother in cases with poor obstetrical outcomes [1,2,3]. Villous capillary lesions of the placenta develop as compensatory attempts to improve chronic fetal hypoxia. Extreme villous hypervascularity is known as chorangiosis, characterized by more than 10 capillaries in more than 10 terminal chorionic villi in several areas of the placenta [8]

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