Hepatic artery hemodynamics suggest operation of a buffer response in the human fetus
Hepatic artery hemodynamics suggest operation of a buffer response in the human fetus
After birth, the hepatic artery buffer response helps to maintain liver perfusion. Here, the authors establish a Doppler technique to measure fetal hepatic artery flow velocity and test the hypothesis that the buffer response also operates prenatally. Women with low-risk pregnancies were recruited to a longitudinal study (N = 161). Measurement techniques and reference ranges for hepatic artery velocities and pulsatility index (PI) were established.
Ductus venosus peak velocity (VDVps) represented the portocaval pressure gradient, and umbilical venous flow (QUV) represented portal flow. Reference ranges were established for the more accessible left hepatic artery branch. Hepatic artery PI was lower in fetuses with VDVps <10th centile (P < .05) and in those with QUV <10th centile ( P < .0001). Conversely, hepatic artery PI was higher in those with QUV >90th centile (P < .0001).
The authors establish a method for measuring fetal hepatic arterial blood velocity, provide reference ranges, and show that the hepatic artery buffer response operates prenatally.
fetus, circulation, blood flow, doppler, hepatic artery, reference ranges, hepatic artery buffer response
166-178
Ebbing, Cathrine
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Rasmmussen, Svein
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Godfrey, Keith M.
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Hanson, Mark A.
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Kiserud, Torvid
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February 2008
Ebbing, Cathrine
72ebfc05-95c6-4fea-a095-b9493c7e1ff5
Rasmmussen, Svein
a470b339-9190-4677-b74f-be23d1a7dc4e
Godfrey, Keith M.
0931701e-fe2c-44b5-8f0d-ec5c7477a6fd
Hanson, Mark A.
1952fad1-abc7-4284-a0bc-a7eb31f70a3f
Kiserud, Torvid
a7689962-989b-4f84-ae1a-dbc10b57c5f9
Ebbing, Cathrine, Rasmmussen, Svein, Godfrey, Keith M., Hanson, Mark A. and Kiserud, Torvid
(2008)
Hepatic artery hemodynamics suggest operation of a buffer response in the human fetus.
Reproductive Sciences, 15 (2), .
(doi:10.1177/1933719107310307).
Abstract
After birth, the hepatic artery buffer response helps to maintain liver perfusion. Here, the authors establish a Doppler technique to measure fetal hepatic artery flow velocity and test the hypothesis that the buffer response also operates prenatally. Women with low-risk pregnancies were recruited to a longitudinal study (N = 161). Measurement techniques and reference ranges for hepatic artery velocities and pulsatility index (PI) were established.
Ductus venosus peak velocity (VDVps) represented the portocaval pressure gradient, and umbilical venous flow (QUV) represented portal flow. Reference ranges were established for the more accessible left hepatic artery branch. Hepatic artery PI was lower in fetuses with VDVps <10th centile (P < .05) and in those with QUV <10th centile ( P < .0001). Conversely, hepatic artery PI was higher in those with QUV >90th centile (P < .0001).
The authors establish a method for measuring fetal hepatic arterial blood velocity, provide reference ranges, and show that the hepatic artery buffer response operates prenatally.
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Published date: February 2008
Keywords:
fetus, circulation, blood flow, doppler, hepatic artery, reference ranges, hepatic artery buffer response
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Local EPrints ID: 145715
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/145715
ISSN: 1933-7191
PURE UUID: 5b1416a0-8a67-41d2-8d12-8c86715939b4
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Date deposited: 19 Apr 2010 13:39
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:44
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Author:
Cathrine Ebbing
Author:
Svein Rasmmussen
Author:
Torvid Kiserud
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