The Physiology of Pregnancy 1 Flashcards
Why are there troubles in studying the placenta?
Hard to convince pregnant women to do invasive experiments, and instead we have to use other species.
The human placenta is major source of steroid hormones, whilst the corpus luteum continues to produce progesterone throughout pregnancy.
But the amount and variations of hormones we produce is far greater then any other specis, so its hard to comparre
Placenta is a rich source of hormones and othercompounds, what is the significance of these?
The significance of many of these hormones is unclear (eg GnRH)
But Hormones such as placental growth hormone variant and hPL may have been important in the past during starvation.
Note that pregnancy involves both mum and baby to contribute to the endocrine balance, so you have 2 patients
It seems to produce everything
Hormone 1: Human Chorionic Gonadotrophin (hCG)
WHat is it, where is it produced and when can you detect it?
-
2 Chain hormone that shares it’s a chain with TSH, LH and FSH
- The hormones all have a unique B chain
-
BhCG is produced only by:
- syncytiotrophoblast of the placenta
- trophectoderm of the preimplantation blastocyst cells that will become the embryo
- BhCG is detectable in the maternal blood/urin within days of implanatation
SImilarities/differences between hCG and LH?
Which one can be used as a diagnostic test?
Very similar hormones, that share an alpha chain and have very similar properties.
BUT LH has a much shorter half-life → for a quick spike leading to ovulation
BhCG has an extension via the Beta chain (33aa longer), which promotes the half life of BhCG in the blood → t1/2 ~24hours
This makes hCG a good diagnostic test
BhCG as a diagnostic tool?
Used to confirm pregnancy via detection of BhCG in urine dipsticks or blood samples.
BhCG secretion increased rapidly in the 1st weeks of pregnancy and peaks at 100,000units/ml at 10 weeks gestation
Post 10 weeks: levels drop off to ~20,000units/ml
- First line: control line (shows testing unit is functional)*
- Second line: confirms pregnancy*
What do they mean by hCG tests working upto 3 days of your period
Because 3 days before your expected period in a 28 day cycle is day25.
Implantation occurs ~ day 21
(takes 7days to implant post ovalutation at day 14).
Therefore can detect the pregnancy even before the first missed menstrualperiod
What’s the Function of hCG during the first 6-8weeks of preganacy?
- Binds to the LH/hCG receptor (shared) and transmits a similar signal to LH
- Luteal Support
- hCG has strong leutotrophic properties: important in stimulating progesterone and oestrogen production by the ovary in the first 6-8weeks of pregnancy
- Stops regression of the corpus luteum (tells mum she is pregnant)
- THe Corpus Luteum doubles in size about a month into pregnancy under the influence of hCG
What’s the function of hCG after the first 6-8weeks of preganacy?
Around now the placenta takes over from the ovary as the major source of progesterone.
- Now hCG main function: stop the uterus from returning to its normal cyclic pattern.
- Does this by stimulating Corpus Luteum to continue secreting progesterone/eostrogen
- These prevent menstruation and maintain the endometrium in a decidualised form
- Women with ovarian cancer can have oophorectomy past this point and maintain pregnancy as ovaries are no longer needed
Why is there more hCG present withmultiple pregnancies (eg twins)?
hCG is produced by the syncytiotrophoblast of the placenta, therefore hCG produced in proportional to placentalmass.
In twins there is an increased amount of syncytiotrophoblast present → more hCG.
How has the importance of hCG in maintaining pregnancy been proven?
Via a vaccine which target hCG, and is used as a contraceptive method. (got to phase 2 clinical trials)
High levels of BhCG antibodies following vaccination → induced infertility
What type of tumours produce high levels of hCG?
Trophoblastic tumours.
- Choriocarcinoma (cancer of uterus) and hydatidiform mole (are mass or growth that forms inside the womb (uterus) at the beginning of a pregnancy)
- also some testicular tumours
Why is hCG so important in pregnancies of male fetuses?
As it is so similar to LH, it produces LH-like activity.
It stimulates synthesis by leydig cells of the fetus testis → stimulates testosterone → drives sexual differentiation
At this early point in development, the pituitary (and therefore LH) have nott formed so you need a replacement.
THis is crtitical for phenotypic sexual differation of males?
How is it that women with high hCG levels can get hyperthyroidism?
A consequence of the 4 hormones LH, FSH, TSH and hCG being so structurally similar is that there is cross reactivity.
SO hCG can lead to stimulation ofthe TSH receptor (or via the LH receptor) in the thyroid.
So choriocarcinoma and hydatidiform moles which produce hCG at very high levels can become hypethyroid
Hormone 2: Progesterone
What is it synthesised from?
Synthesised by the
Syncytiotrophoblast of Placenta: shown by choriocarcinoma and hydatidiform moles produce progesterone by themselves
But as trophoblasts can’t convert Acetate → Cholesterols, it instead uses LDL-cholesterol derived from maternal circulation.
The Syncytiotrophpblasts expresses various receptors to assist this LDL uptake.
How does the LDL receptor level on syncytiotrophoblast change throughout pregnancy?
Early on:
Loosely held within the tissue
Mid-gestation/term:
Densely packed into the syncytiotrophoblast very strongly. (to pick up lots of LDL for building higher levels of progesterone as gestation progresses)