Abstract
Introduction. Congenital heart defects (CHD) in fetus can affect the course of pregnancy, cause changes in the functioning of the pregnant woman's systems and metabolic and hemodynamic disorders. The relevance of the problems CHD is primarily due to their high frequency in newborns (5-9 per 1,000 live births) depending on geographical differences and the significant share among multiple congenital malformations and the need for surgical treatment in the neonatal period. Placenta, as one of the least studied human organs, plays not only a crucial role in the process of organogenesis, but also in the "programming" of human health after fetal and newborn periods. For today, it’s important to determine the association between the CHD and placental abnormalities, the nature and consequences of which need further study.Objective. To study morphological and immunohistochemical features of placental structures in parturients with isolated congenital heart defects in the newborn.Material and methods. Over the period 2020-2021, 90 pregnant women aged 17 to 39 years (mean age 28.36±5.08) who gave birth at 37-41 weeks, and their placents, of which 30 had different forms of CHD in the newborn, were examined on a hospital-based sample. Patients were divided into two groups: the study - women with CHD in the newborn, and control - somatically healthy motherswith healthy children. Given the different etiologies of cardiovascular defects in fetus, as well as the presence of different risk factorsfor their occurrence, in order to minimize their impact on the emergence of isolated CHD, considered appropriate selection criteria for pregnant women with non-syndromic forms of cardiovascular defects, as the presence of genetic syndrome can affect intrauterine fetaldevelopment, which makes it impossible to determine a single effect of CHD development. The selection criteria in this study included:somatically healthy woman, unburdened pregnancy, natural insemination (without using of reproductive technologies), the presence of isolated heart disease in the fetus, confirmed by a cardiologist using echocardiography. Organometric, macroscopic, general histological and immunohistochemical methods were used to study placental morphology and placental factors.Results. Analyzing the data on the morphological features of placentas from women with CHD in the newborn, we should note the presence of circulatory disorders in 60% of cases, namely multiple infarcts, complete or partial obliteration of arteries and arterioles with perivascular fibrosis (in the stem villi – 15%, intermediate – 10%, terminal - 10%), reduced number of fetal vessels in the terminal villiand syncytiocapillary membranes, abrupt vasodilation of intermediate villi. Complete or partial replacement of villous epithelium by fibrinoid masses in 20% was also detected. Immunohistochemical study of placental growth factor showed less pronounced expression in syncytia, decidual sheath and stromal cells (1-2 points) compared with control (2-3 points).Conclusions. The revealed morphological and immunohistochemical changes in the placental barrier at different levels refer to the damage of maternal and fetal placenta structures of parturients with isolated neonatal heart disease, which lead to impaired stromalvascular processes with reduced perfusion. This confirms the world data on the presence of placental-cardiac axis and can be a predictor of CHD at the early stages of placental structure study, as well as in further prediction of the child's health.
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