Abstract

With rapid intravenous infusion of very large volumes of isotonic saline solutions into the fetus, the fluid could stay within the fetal body, thereby creating hydrops fetalis, be transferred into the amniotic fluid through the fetal kidneys, thereby creating polyhydramnios, or be transferred across the placenta into the maternal circulation. This study was designed to explore these possibilities. After a 1-hour control period, 10 near-term chronically catheterized ovine fetuses were infused intravenously with 4 L (greater than 100% of fetal weight) of either isotonic saline solution or lactated Ringer's solution over 4 hours. Fetal arterial pressure was significantly elevated by 7 mm Hg throughout the infusion (p less than 0.00001). Venous pressure underwent a transient rise (4.8 mm Hg) at 20 minutes of infusion and remained elevated (2.7 mm Hg) during the rest of the infusion (p less than 0.00001). Fetal urine flow increased by an average of 5.7 +/- 0.4 ml/min throughout the infusion (p less than 0.00001) and accounted for 34.1% +/- 2.6% of the infused volume. Estimated fetal extracellular fluid volume increased by 17.7% +/- 1.8% of the infused volume. Because fetal fluid retention, urine flow, and amniotic fluid volume changes accounted for only half of the infused fluid, the remainder of the infused volume must have crossed the placenta and entered the maternal circulation. Given the above changes in vascular pressures, this requires a filtration coefficient of the placenta 50 to 100 times the previously reported values. Thus we conclude that relatively small changes in fetal vascular pressures dramatically alter the filtration capacity of the ovine placenta and transplacental volume flow.

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