Abstract

Umbilical venous and amniotic fluid pressures were measured in 68 human pregnancies at the time that cordocentesis was performed. Normal umbilical venous pressure was unrelated to gestational age and remained within a tight range (5.3 ± 2.3 mm Hg, mean ± SD). Fetuses with an elevated umbilical venous pressure had disorders consistent with either hepatomegaly or congestive heart failure. Umbilical venous pressure was significantly increased before treatment in two fetuses with immune hydrops; it rapidly declined with treatment. Neither gestational age nor umbilical venous pressure was significantly different in the groups that received and did not receive pancuronium. There was a strong relationship between amniotic fluid pressure and gestational age in normal pregnancy (r = 0.54, p < 0.0001). Women with hydramnios had amniotc fluid pressures greater than control subjects (p = 0.0007). This investigation documents normal human amniotic fluid and fetal umbilical venous pressures. These measurements are altered by disease and may prove to be of diagnostic and therapeutic value in the future.

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