MATERIALS AND METHODSplasia is also found as an isolated anomaly (3,4) or in association with minor deformities compatible with survival, i.e. oligohydramnios deformation sequence following prolonged rupture of the fetal membranes (5).Over 20 years ago, both Blanc et al. (6) and Bain et al. (7) demonstrated, using perinatal autopsy data, that prolonged oligohydramnios, irrespective of its cause, was associated with fetal lung hypoplasia. More recently, experimental evidence derived from work in various mammalian species confirmed this association (8-11). Two important questions remain unanswered: I) what is the mechanism by which lack of amniotic fluid interferes with fetal lung growth? 2) What are the influences of both gestational age at the onset of oligohydramnios, and its duration, on the degree of lung hypoplasia? This report focuses on the latter question using the guinea pig model of oligohydramnios. A preliminary account of these experiments has been published previously (12).Fetal lung growth proceeds in three consecutive stages, i.e. the pseudoglandular, canalicular, and terminal sac stages. Although this sequence is invariable, its timing in gestation varies among species. We induced oligohydramnios between days 40 and 55 of gestation in the guinea pig, a period roughly corresponding to 18 to 29 wk of gestation in the human. The five time-frames studied are illustrated in Figure I, along with the stages of fetal lung development involved. More specifically, the experiments were as follows: experiment A: drainage between days 40 and 45 (5 days); experiment B: drainage between 45 and 50 (5 days); experiment C: drainage between days 50 and 55 (5 days); experiment D: drainage between days 40 and 50 (10 days); experiment E: drainage between days 45 and 55 (10 days).All fetuses were sacrificed at the end of the 5-or 10-days study period to assess fetal and lung growth. In order to overcome the effects of variation between litters, we used untouched littermate fetuses as controls. Whenever possible, untouched littermate fetuses located at the same level in the opposite uterine horn were chosen as paired controls in order to control for the naturally occurring intralitter variation in fetal size.Pregnant guinea pigs (Cavia porcellus, Camm-Hartley strain) were obtained 30 days after mating from the Camm Research Laboratory, Wayne, NJ. Pregnant animals were caged individually and provided with guinea pig chow no. 5025 (Ralston Purina Co.) and tap water ad libitum. Following an overnight fast, the animals were anesthetized with intramuscular injections of ketamine hydrochloride (40 mg/kg) (Ketaset, Bristol Lab.) and acepromazine maleate (3 mg/kg) (Tech America Group, Inc.). After local anesthesia with lidocaine, a midline laparotomy was performed. Both uterine horns were exteriorized and the position of each fetus was recorded. Half the litter was randomly assigned to the experimental group and the other half served as 951 ABSTRACf. We drained amniotic fluid for periods of 5 and 10 days at various times in g...
ABSTRACT. Experimentally-induced oligohydramnios (oligo) produces lung hypoplasia. To determine if arginine vasopressin (AVP), a hormone known to decrease fetal lung fluid production, contributes to the pathogenesis of oligo-induced lung hypoplasia, the following experiment was performed. Brattleboro rats were mated to produce litters either with AVP [heterozygotes ( Congenital lung hypoplasia is a major cause of early neonatal mortality. A recent autopsy series of 419 consecutive early neonatal deaths over a 15-y period (1) reported that prevalence of lung hypoplasia increased from 13 to 22% while other pulmonary pathologies decreased, perhaps reflecting improved prevention and care of these other pathologies (e.g. hyaline membrane disease, meconium aspiration, pneumonia). In 27% of the cases in the above series, lung hypoplasia was associated with oligo, although the pathogenesis remains elusive.Lung growth is disturbed if fetal lung fluid volume is not maintained within normal limits. Lung volume in the fetus appears to be maintained by intrinsic forces acting from within
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