Summary information

Study title

Distribution of Umbilical Glucose Supply to Fetal Liver and Systemic Organs. The Role of Umbilical Vein Glucose Concentration Versus Umbilical Vein Flow, 2015

Creator

Not available

Study number / PID

https://doi.org/10.18712/NSD-NSD2780-V1 (DOI)

Data access

Information not available

Series

Not available

Abstract

This research project is based on a cross-sectional study including 124 healthy pregnant women who were delivered by elective cesarean section. Immediately before surgery blood flow in the umbilical vein and ductus venosus were measured by ultrasound technique. Thereafter blood samples from the maternal and umbilical circulations were collected during surgery. These measurements gave us a unique opportunity to investigate how glucose concentration and/or blood flow in the umbilical vein influenced the distribution of flow to the fetal liver versus ductus venosus to the fetal systemic circulation. In addition we investigated how maternal prepregnant body mass index (ppBMI) and markers of fetal wellbeing, i.e. cerebral and umbilical blood flow resistance and fetal proportions in a normal population affected the distribution fetal flow to the liver versus systemic circulation. We found blood flow and not glucose concentration in the umbilical vein to correlate with distribution of flow to the liver versus systemic circulation. After dicitomicing in two maternal ppBMI groups (one normal weight and one overweight) we found maternal ppBMI group to affect this flow distribution. We therefore speculate that to assure both a sufficient glucose supply to brain and heart and stabile blood glucose levels, the amount of blood shunted through DV versus liver, UV blood flow seems to play a central role.

Keywords

Not available

Methodology

Data collection period

19/11/2011 - 08/06/2015

Country

Time dimension

Not available

Analysis unit

Individ

Universe

Healthy women with normal pregnancies, as well as their children

Sampling procedure

Not available

Kind of data

Numeriske

Data collection mode

Not available

Funding information

Funder

South-Eastern Norway Regional Health Authority

Funder

Oslo University Hospital

Funder

University of Oslo

Access

Publisher

NSD - Norwegian Centre for Research Data

Publication year

2019-12-11T00:00:00

Terms of data access

Not available

Related publications

Not available