Gross Umbilical Cord Complications Are Associated With Placental Lesions of Circulatory Stasis and Fetal Hypoxia

被引:51
作者
Chan, Joanna S. Y. [1 ]
Baergen, Rebecca N.
机构
[1] New York Presbyterian Hosp, Dept Pathol & Lab Med, New York, NY USA
关键词
fetal death; fetal hypoxia; placenta; placental circulation; umbilical cord; OBSTETRICALLY IMPORTANT LESIONS; CEREBRAL-PALSY; THROMBOTIC VASCULOPATHY; CLINICAL-SIGNIFICANCE; RISK-FACTORS; NUCHAL CORD; TRUE KNOTS; PATHOLOGY; ABNORMALITIES; RESTRICTION;
D O I
10.2350/12-06-1211-OA.1
中图分类号
R36 [病理学];
学科分类号
100104 ;
摘要
Umbilical cord complications (UCC), such as true knots (TK), velamentous (VEL) insertion, marginal umbilical cord (MUC) insertion, umbilical cord entanglement (UCE) (both nuchal and non-nuchal), excessively long umbilical cord (ELUC), and excessively twisted umbilical cord (ETUC), can lead to decreased UC blood flow and have been associated with adverse fetal outcome and intrauterine fetal demise (IUFD). Few large series exist that correlate UCC with specific pathologic findings of the placenta. We present the largest series of UCC at this time. Eight hundred forty-one 3rd-trimester placentas with UCC were identified, as well as 858 randomly selected gestational age-matched placentas with grossly unremarkable UC. Lesions associated with circulatory stasis and thrombosis, including villous capillary congestion (VC), umbilical vessel distension (UVD), chorionic plate vessel distension (CPD), umbilical vessel thrombosis (UVT), fetal vascular thrombosis (FVT), intimal fibrin cushions (IFC), and avascular villi (AV), were noted, as well as other pathologic lesions. Data were analyzed by analysis of variance and Fisher exact tests, with P < 0.05 statistically significant. Umbilical cord complications as a group was associated with a significant increase in placental circulatory stasis lesions. Lesions associated with hypoxia, namely nucleated red blood cells and chorangiosis, were also increased. Finally, the presence of any UCC was significantly associated with IUFD. We also found that multiple UCC are associated with nonreassuring fetal heart rate and chorangiosis but that the presence of a single UCC was not. This indicates that UCC may lead to intrauterine hypoxia and subsequent adverse fetal outcome and that multiple UCC may be cumulative in effect.
引用
收藏
页码:487 / 494
页数:8
相关论文
共 29 条
[1]   Clinical significance of true umbilical knots: A population-based analysis [J].
Airas, U ;
Heinonen, S .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PERINATOLOGY, 2002, 19 (03) :127-132
[2]   Cord abnormalities, structural lesions, and cord "accidents" [J].
Baergen, Rebecca N. .
SEMINARS IN DIAGNOSTIC PATHOLOGY, 2007, 24 (01) :23-32
[3]   Morbidity, mortality, and placental pathology in excessively long umbilical cords: Retrospective study [J].
Baergen, RN ;
Malicki, D ;
Behling, C ;
Benirschke, K .
PEDIATRIC AND DEVELOPMENTAL PATHOLOGY, 2001, 4 (02) :144-153
[4]  
Baergen RN, 2011, MANUAL BERNISCHKE KA
[5]  
BENIRSCHKE K, 1994, J REPROD MED, V39, P262
[6]  
Benirschke K., 2006, Pathology of the Human Placenta, P321
[7]   Gross morphological changes of placentas associated with intrauterine growth restriction of fetuses: A case control study [J].
Biswas, Sharmistha ;
Ghosh, S. K. .
EARLY HUMAN DEVELOPMENT, 2008, 84 (06) :357-362
[8]   Causes of Death Among Stillbirths [J].
Bukowski, Radek ;
Carpenter, Marshall ;
Conway, Deborah ;
Coustan, Donald ;
Dudley, Donald J. ;
Goldenberg, Robert L. ;
Hogue, Carol J. Rowland ;
Koch, Matthew A. ;
Parker, Corette B. ;
Pinar, Halit ;
Reddy, Uma M. ;
Saade, George R. ;
Silver, Robert M. ;
Stoll, Barbara J. ;
Varner, Michael W. ;
Willinger, Marian .
JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 2011, 306 (22) :2459-2468
[9]   Umbilical cord accidents: Human studies [J].
Collins, JH .
SEMINARS IN PERINATOLOGY, 2002, 26 (01) :79-82
[10]   Neonatal outcome of the pregnancies associated with placental villous thrombosis - thrombophilic status of the mothers and the infants [J].
Demirel, Gamze ;
Celik, Istemi Han ;
Zergeroglu, Sema ;
Erdeve, Omer ;
Dilmen, Ugur .
JOURNAL OF MATERNAL-FETAL & NEONATAL MEDICINE, 2012, 25 (11) :2225-2229