Abstract

IntroductionThe direction of blood movement in normal and abnormal placenta is curious from a morphometric point of view. Once pregnancy is compromised by an illness like hypertension, maternal and foetal distress can lead to negative outcomes. The quantitative variations in the blood vessels within the chorion and the chorionic villi in placentas from pregnancies are complicated by preeclampsia (PE) and are poorly defined. The purpose of this study was to calculate and explore the morphometric measurement of blood vessels involved in the progress of hypertension through pregnancy within the chorion and the chorionic villi among normotensive women (n = 39) versus a preeclamptic group (n = 35). MethodsMeasurements used a computerized morphometry system and a Vascular Medicine Institute (VMI) calculator. ResultsOur data showed a significant decrease in vessel area (VA), wall area (WA), lumen area (LA), mean wall thickness-boundary (MWTB), mean wall thickness-rosette (MWTR), mean diameter-rosette (MDR), mean wall thickness-skeleton (MWTS), and external diameter-skeleton (EDS) in preeclampsia women compared to normotensive women. There were no significant differences between preeclampsia and control group in lumen area. DiscussionWe concluded that preeclamptic chorion and chorionic villi vessels are linked with significant structural discrepancies; future studies should address morphological events that occur throughout pregnancy including associations between arterial elastic properties—mainly collagen and structural proteins in hypertensive patients. A more integrated approach involving parallel analysis of the effects of potential vasoactive factors on the morphology of foetal vessel alteration is also needed.

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