Abstract

We report five cases of sudden intrauterine death due to premature closure of the ductus arteriosus. In four cases, this was caused by dissecting the hematoma of the ductus arteriosus with intimal flap and obliteration of the lumen. In one case, the ductus arteriosus was aneurysmatic, with lumen occlusion caused by thrombus stratification. No drug therapy or free medication consumption were reported during pregnancy. The time of stillbirth ranged between 26 and 33 gestational weeks. We performed TUNEL analysis for apoptosis quantification. The dissecting features were intimal tears with flap formation in four of the cases, just above the origin of the ductus arteriosus from the pulmonary artery. The dissecting hematoma of the ductus arteriosus extended downward to the descending aorta and backward to the aortic arch with involvement of the left carotid and left subclavian arteries. TUNEL analysis showed a high number of apoptotic smooth muscle cells in the media in two cases. Abnormal ductal remodeling with absence of subintimal cushions, lacunar spaces rich in glycosaminoglycans (cystic medial necrosis), and smooth muscle cell apoptosis were the pathological substrates accounting for failure of remodeling process and dissection.

Highlights

  • 375 cases collected since from 25 weeks of gestation to term, we identified five cases (1.3%) of abrupt ductus arteriosus closure caused by dissection of the ductus with hematoma of the parietal wall and obliteration of the lumen

  • Among 375 cases collected since from 25 weeks of gestation to term, we have identified at autopsy, 5 cases (1.3%) of abrupt ductus arteriosus closure caused by dissection of the ductus with hematoma of the parietal wall and ab extrinseco compression of the lumen

  • We present five cases of ductus arteriosus dissection, all male, as a cause of death (1.3%)

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Summary

Introduction

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Sudden intrauterine death is a socio-epidemiological problem. The causes of unexpected death are mostly related to placenta injury in terms of placenta insufficiency, maternal malperfusion vascularization, inadequate fetal vascularization, or umbilical cord causes, such as nodal cord, rupture, marginal insertion, etc. Most of the studies in the literature show a high percentage of cases reported as unexplained causes, ranging from 20% to 50% [3]

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