Search results for "Ductus"
showing 7 items of 27 documents
Sildenafil citrate improves perinatal outcome in fetuses from pre-eclamptic rats
2012
Please cite this paper as: Herraiz S, Pellicer B., Serra V, Cauli O, Cortijo J, Felipo V, Pellicer A. Sildenafil citrate improves perinatal outcome in fetuses from pre-eclamptic rats. BJOG 2012;119:1394–1402. Objective To evaluate perinatal outcome after sildenafil citrate (SC) administration at the onset of pregnancy in a rat pre-eclampsia model. Design In vivo animal experimental study. Setting Fundacion IVI-Instituto Universitario IVI, Valencia, Spain. Sample Control and pre-eclampsia-induced pregnant Wistar rats exposed to chronic SC administration. Methods We evaluated the use of SC, which was tested as a potential therapeutic tool to maintain vasodilatation in complicated pregnanc…
OC005: Ultrasound bioeffects: Quantification of cellular damage in animal fetal liver after use of Doppler pulse to measure ductus venosus
2008
OC133: Natriuretic peptide levels in IUGR fetuses with absent and reversed enddiastolic flow of the umbilical artery in relation to ductus venosus fl…
2003
Abnormalities of the umbilico-portal venous system in Down syndrome: A report of two new patients
2003
Congenital anomalies of the umbilical and portal venous system are rare vascular malformations which are often associated with anomalies of the heart and gastrointestinal tract. Association with chromosomal disorders has been sporadically reported. We now report on two patients with trisomy 21 and congenital anomalies of the umbilico-portal system. A male fetus showed absence of the intrahepatic portal vein (PV) and ductus venosus with a direct communication between portal sinus and inferior vena cava exhibiting an umbilicosystemic total shunt during the fetal life and a portosystemic total shunt after birth. A female infant showed absence of the intrahepatic PV and a total portocaval shunt…
Haemodynamic effects of long-term administration of sildenafil in normotensive pregnant and non-pregnant rats
2011
Please cite this paper as: Pellicer B, Herraiz S, Cauli O, Rodrigo R, Asensi M, Cortijo J, Serra V, Morcillo E, Felipo V, Simon C, Pellicer A. Haemodynamic effects of long-term administration of sildenafil in normotensive pregnant and non-pregnant rats. BJOG 2011;118:615–623. Objective To determine the effects of chronic administration of sildenafil citrateon healthy pregnant rats. Design In vivo animal experimental study. Setting Fundacion IVI–Instituto Universitario IVI, Valencia, Spain. Sample Pregnant and non-pregnant Wistarrats exposed to chronic administration of sildenafil. Methods Placental cross-barrier and feto-maternal relationship levels, maternal blood pressure, and haemody…
Dilation of the ductus venosus by stent implantation increases placental blood perfusion in fetal sheep.
2006
The reduction of resistance to flow in the ductus venous (DV) and a decrease of blood supply to the liver serve for the survival of the fetus during hypoxia. The present study investigated the influence of the increased diameter of the DV on placental blood perfusion.In 15 ewes with twin pregnancies at gestational ages of 117 +/- 4 days, a stent (4 or 5 mm) was placed into the DV of 1 twin (DV(stent) group) under ultrasound guidance. Blood flow rates in the umbilical vein (UV) and DV of both fetuses were measured using Doppler ultrasound. Eight pairs of twin fetuses were included for the final analysis.The dilatation of the DV increased the blood flow volume rate passed through the DV from …
Ultrasound bioeffects in rats: quantification of cellular damage in the fetal liver after pulsed Doppler imaging
2011
Objective To determine whether pulsed Doppler examination of the ductus venosus in rat fetuses could damage exposed tissue. Methods On gestational day 18, the livers of a mean of approximately five fetuses per mother (n = 5.14, SD = 1.6), in a cohort of 35 pregnant female rats, were exposed individually to pulsed Doppler and these were considered the 'exposed group'. The remaining fetuses in each pregnant rat (n = 5.16, SD = 2.1) formed the 'control group'. We tested for 600, 300, 60, 20, 15, 10 and 3 s of exposure of the fetal ductus venosus and the damage was evaluated measuring a cell death index of apoptotic activity at 7 h post-exposure (n = 16). In addition, subgroups of mothers were …