Abstract
This experimental study was designed to test the effects of acute changes in fetal circulating blood volume on the umbilical artery pulsatility index (PI). Six fetal sheep were provided with an electromagnetic flow meter for measurement of umbilical venous blood flow, with catheters for determination of arterial blood pressure and umbilical venous pressure, and with a 5 MHz Doppler transducer around one umbilical artery for flow velocity waveform analysis. A catheter in the inferior vena cava was used to infuse 50 ml of maternal blood (hypervolemia) into the fetal circulation or to withdraw 50 ml of fetal blood (hypovolemia) after volume correction. Hypervolemia resulted in a rise in arterial pressure and umbilical venous pressure, without an effect on PI, umbilical blood flow or placental vascular resistance. Hypovolemia resulted in a decrease in fetal heart rate, arterial pressure, umbilical venous pressure and umbilical blood flow. Calculated placental vascular resistance was not changed, whereas the PI increased by 42%. We conclude that volume loading with 10–15% of fetal circulating volume does not affect the umbilical artery PI, whereas acute reduction of fetal blood volume with the same amount is associated with an increase in the umbilical artery PI, without changes in calculated placental vascular resistance.
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