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The effect of systemic administration of lipopolysaccharide on cerebral haemodynamics and oxygenation in the 0.65 gestation ovine fetus in utero

The effect of systemic administration of lipopolysaccharide on cerebral haemodynamics and oxygenation in the 0.65 gestation ovine fetus in utero
The effect of systemic administration of lipopolysaccharide on cerebral haemodynamics and oxygenation in the 0.65 gestation ovine fetus in utero
Objective: To investigate the effect of intravenous lipopolysaccharide on systemic and cerebral haemodynamics and oxygenation in the preterm ovine fetus.
Design: Prospective observational study.
Setting: Research centre for perinatal brain injury.
Sample: Nine fetal sheep at circa 93 days of gestation (0.65).
Methods: Fetal sheep were chronically instrumented with arterial and venous catheters and a flow probe in the carotid artery. Near-infrared spectroscopy was used to measure changes in cerebral oxygenation and total haemoglobin concentration. Three days after surgery, each fetus was given 100 ng/kg Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide. Observations were continued for 48 hours post-injection and compared with baseline control values.
Main outcome measures: Fetal heart rate, mean arterial pressure, carotid blood flow.
Results: Three fetuses died after administration of the lipopolysaccharide. In the survivors fetal heart rate rose from 193 (SEM 7) to a mean maximal level of 226 (SEM 31 bpm) (P= 0.01) after 6.5 (SEM 1.0) hours. The mean arterial pressure decreased from 40.5 (SEM 4.2) to 29.4 (SEM 1.6) mmHg (P< 0.05) after 7.0 (SEM 2.0) hours, and carotid blood flow increased from 29.6 (SEM 1.6) to 45.8 (SEM 5.7) mL/min (P= 0.0002) at 12 (SEM 3) hours. All values returned to control levels by 48 hours. Histological assessment showed evidence of periventricular leucomalacia in three out of six brains studied.
Conclusion: These data do not suggest that cerebral ischaemia is the main aetiological factor in endotoxin-related fetal brain injury. Fetal tachycardia and cerebral vasodilation may indicate endotoxaemia in fetuses exposed to prenatal infection.
1470-0328
735-743
Peebles, Donald M.
62d4334e-37bc-4744-8582-49df22625888
Miller, Suzanne
bdf23b15-1ef2-41c6-aeb5-4acad25532ef
Newman, James P.
66b510f1-a2cd-4f9f-a1a7-53aaccc644f5
Scott, Rosemary
106800fd-3ae1-4ab6-86f6-28356121d657
Hanson, Mark A.
1952fad1-abc7-4284-a0bc-a7eb31f70a3f
Peebles, Donald M.
62d4334e-37bc-4744-8582-49df22625888
Miller, Suzanne
bdf23b15-1ef2-41c6-aeb5-4acad25532ef
Newman, James P.
66b510f1-a2cd-4f9f-a1a7-53aaccc644f5
Scott, Rosemary
106800fd-3ae1-4ab6-86f6-28356121d657
Hanson, Mark A.
1952fad1-abc7-4284-a0bc-a7eb31f70a3f

Peebles, Donald M., Miller, Suzanne, Newman, James P., Scott, Rosemary and Hanson, Mark A. (2003) The effect of systemic administration of lipopolysaccharide on cerebral haemodynamics and oxygenation in the 0.65 gestation ovine fetus in utero. BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology, 110 (8), 735-743. (doi:10.1111/j.1471-0528.2003.02152.x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: To investigate the effect of intravenous lipopolysaccharide on systemic and cerebral haemodynamics and oxygenation in the preterm ovine fetus.
Design: Prospective observational study.
Setting: Research centre for perinatal brain injury.
Sample: Nine fetal sheep at circa 93 days of gestation (0.65).
Methods: Fetal sheep were chronically instrumented with arterial and venous catheters and a flow probe in the carotid artery. Near-infrared spectroscopy was used to measure changes in cerebral oxygenation and total haemoglobin concentration. Three days after surgery, each fetus was given 100 ng/kg Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide. Observations were continued for 48 hours post-injection and compared with baseline control values.
Main outcome measures: Fetal heart rate, mean arterial pressure, carotid blood flow.
Results: Three fetuses died after administration of the lipopolysaccharide. In the survivors fetal heart rate rose from 193 (SEM 7) to a mean maximal level of 226 (SEM 31 bpm) (P= 0.01) after 6.5 (SEM 1.0) hours. The mean arterial pressure decreased from 40.5 (SEM 4.2) to 29.4 (SEM 1.6) mmHg (P< 0.05) after 7.0 (SEM 2.0) hours, and carotid blood flow increased from 29.6 (SEM 1.6) to 45.8 (SEM 5.7) mL/min (P= 0.0002) at 12 (SEM 3) hours. All values returned to control levels by 48 hours. Histological assessment showed evidence of periventricular leucomalacia in three out of six brains studied.
Conclusion: These data do not suggest that cerebral ischaemia is the main aetiological factor in endotoxin-related fetal brain injury. Fetal tachycardia and cerebral vasodilation may indicate endotoxaemia in fetuses exposed to prenatal infection.

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Published date: 2003

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 25895
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/25895
ISSN: 1470-0328
PURE UUID: 3e44e44d-e92a-4303-8af7-db3138976855
ORCID for Mark A. Hanson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6907-613X

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Date deposited: 20 Apr 2006
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:17

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Contributors

Author: Donald M. Peebles
Author: Suzanne Miller
Author: James P. Newman
Author: Rosemary Scott
Author: Mark A. Hanson ORCID iD

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