Gestational Age, Infection, and Suboptimal Maternal Prepregnancy BMI Independently Associate with Placental Histopathology in a Cohort of Pregnancies without Major Maternal Comorbidities
Eleanor Duffley, David Grynspan, Hailey Scott, Anthea Lafrenière, Cherley Borba Vieira de Andrade, Enrrico Bloise, Kristin L. Connor

TL;DR
This study shows that maternal BMI, preterm birth, and infection each independently affect placental health, which may influence pregnancy outcomes.
Contribution
The study identifies independent associations between maternal BMI, gestational age, and infection with placental histopathology in uncomplicated pregnancies.
Findings
Preterm pregnancies with chorioamnionitis showed decreased fetal capillary and increased villous stromal volumetric proportions.
Overweight and obese mothers had a higher proportion of immature placentae compared to normal weight mothers.
Placental hypermaturity and altered morphometry were observed in preterm pregnancies with chorioamnionitis.
Abstract
Background: The placenta undergoes morphological and functional adaptations to adverse exposures during pregnancy. The effects ofsuboptimal maternal body mass index (BMI), preterm birth, and infection on placental histopathological phenotypes are not yet well understood, despite the association between these conditions and poor offspring outcomes. We hypothesized that suboptimal maternal prepregnancy BMI and preterm birth (with and without infection) would associate with altered placental maturity and morphometry, and that altered placental maturity would associate with poor birth outcomes. Methods: Clinical data and human placentae were collected from 96 pregnancies where mothers were underweight, normal weight, overweight, or obese, without other major complications. Placental histopathological characteristics were scored by an anatomical pathologist. Associations between maternal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLinguistic Studies and Language Acquisition · Medieval European Literature and History
