C1 Programming developmental disease risk Flashcards
1
Q
Intrauterine growth restrictions (IUGR)
A
- Defined:
- <2.5kg (2% of babies),
- Small for gestational age (10%)
- Mainly from placental insufficiency
- <2SD below population means
- Increases perinatal mortality risk by 2-3x
2
Q
Z-score of babies born small
A
- Below 0 z-score
3
Q
Placental insufficiency
A
- Due to ↓ placental nutrition, not from being born pre-maturely
- Uteroplacental insufficiency (placenta not working)
- Mostly in the western world
- Maternal undernutrition
- Mostly in 3rd world
- Maternal diseases
- Genetic
4
Q
Fetal programming
A
- Babies born small → ↑risk of developing adult diseases
- Independent of levels of obesity & exercise
- Boy > girls risk of developing diseases
- 90% of babies have accelerated growth in 1st 6 months
- Early catch-up growth = protective
- Late = adverse (↑fat → ↑risk)
5
Q
Lactation environment for babies born small
A
- Lactation env critical feature for babies born small
- ↓milk quality & quantity during lactation (wants to match baby who is small) → further compromises baby growth
6
Q
Features of restricted MALES
A
- ↓nephron # at 6 months (↓30%)
- Glomerular hypertrophy to compensate → ↑BP
7
Q
Features of restricted FEMALES
A
- Same nephron deficit + glomerular hypertrophy
- No ↑in BP (protected)
- Risk of developing renal diseases
8
Q
Rat uteroplacental insufficiency experiments
A
- Mimics intrauterine growth restriction → born small offsprings
- Alters maternal endocrine env
- Impairs mammary dev during pregnancy
- Triggers early lactogenesis
- ↓Milk quality & quantity during lactation
9
Q
Treatment: Effects of exercise
A
- Effects of Exercise
- Early exercise → 5-9wks → prevents β-cells deficit
- By 24 wks → full restoration of β-cells
- Ex → prevents metabolic dysfunction
10
Q
Treatment: Effects of nutrition
A
- Effects of nutrition
- Cross-fostering & improved post-natal nutrition → prevents deficits
- Cross-fostering = removed from biological parents & raised by surrogates
11
Q
Transgenerational programming
A
- Programmed effects can be transmitted to subsequent generation
- Maternal line transmission more dominant
12
Q
Adverse pregnancy adaptations
A
- Females born small & pregnant leads to:
- Glucose intolerance
- Glomerular hypertrophy
- ↓Vascular compliance
- Affects other generations
13
Q
Implications of doing physiological tests
A
- Physiological measures causing maternal stress:
- Measuring BP → tail cuff and restraint
- GTT → tail vein sample & heat
- Renal function → separate in metabolic cage
- Puts stress on pregnant mothers → maternal stress during pregnancy causes fetal growth restrictions
14
Q
Kidney effects
A
- 2nd generation nephron #F2 nephrons #
- ↓ (15-22%) at E20 but restored at PN35
- Shows nephrogenesis was delayed
- ↓ (15-22%) at E20 but restored at PN35
15
Q
Consequences of maternal obesity
A
- ↑Risk of:
- Gestational hypertension
- Diabetes
- Pre-eclampsia