Abstract

To examine the clinicopathologic correlations of three histological patterns of diffuse chronic hypoxic placental injury (preuterine [PR], uterine [UH], and postuterine [PU]), a retrospective statistical analysis of a large 14-year placental database was performed. Of 5097 placentas between 20 and 43 weeks of gestation examined consecutively, 4413 did not feature histological chronic placental hypoxia, while 684 did. In the latter, maternal hypertensive disorders, diabetes mellitus, abnormal cardiotocography and Dopplers, cesarean sections, inductions of labor, and fetal growth restriction, as well as other placental hypoxic lesions and decidual arteriolopathy, were statistically significantly more common than in the remaining placental material. Two hundred eighty-nine PR cases featured the most advanced gestational age and meconium staining; 237 UH cases featured severe preeclampsia, decidual arteriolopathy, villous infarction, membrane laminar necrosis, microscopic chorionic pseudocysts, excessive extravillous trophoblasts, and maternal floor multinucleate trophoblastic giant cells; and 158 PU cases featured the lowest placental weight and the highest prevalence of abnormal Dopplers, umbilical cord compromise, fetal growth restriction, cesarean section rate, and complicated 3rd stage of labor. The specificity of chronic hypoxic patterns of placental injury was much higher than the sensitivity, with the highest specificity for an excessive amount of extravillous trophoblasts. Diagnosing various hypoxic patterns of placental injury by histology may help to clarify the etiopathogenesis of a significant proportion of complications of pregnancy and abnormal fetal or neonatal outcomes. The patterns should help to retrospectively diagnose placental hypoxia, even in clinically unsuspected cases.

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