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3 intaining hemostatic balance and stabilizing uteroplacental attachment at the fibrinoid layer found a
4 of unknown origin suggests that these three uteroplacental bleeding disorders do not have a common e
5 ere was no evidence for an increased risk of uteroplacental bleeding disorders with increasing number
6 proteinuria in pregnant rats, and decreased uteroplacental blood flow and fetal and placental growth
7 ted with reduced fetal weight, and disturbed uteroplacental blood flow and severe malnutrition were a
8 potential therapeutic targets for augmenting uteroplacental blood flow and, in turn, preserving fetal
9 ionally, impaired placental angiogenesis and uteroplacental blood flow appears to be an early defect
11 A) remodeling is essential to ensure optimal uteroplacental blood flow during human pregnancy, yet ve
12 phoblast invasion of the decidua, leading to uteroplacental blood flow that is inadequate for the dev
14 stemic and uterine hemodynamics that reduces uteroplacental blood flow, a mechanism underlying matern
15 both) in fetuses from dams with interrupted uteroplacental blood flow, bacterial peritonitis, and ol
16 s that maternal factors, such as compromised uteroplacental blood flow, concomitant infection, and ad
22 orced daily swimming, short-term clamping of uteroplacental blood vessels, restricted dietary intake,
23 ions within the physiological range regulate uteroplacental carbohydrate metabolism remains unknown.
25 ult in increased placental thrombosis in the uteroplacental circulation and may therefore contribute
30 quantified the rates of umbilical uptake and uteroplacental consumption of nutrients in preterm fetus
32 clinical, laboratory, echocardiographic, and uteroplacental Doppler flow (UDF) parameters at 20 and 3
33 cardiorespiratory, renal, hepatic, etc.), or uteroplacental dysfunction (e.g., placental abruption).
34 ncentration >75 nmol/L and a reduced risk of uteroplacental dysfunction as indicated by a composite o
35 eurological or haematological complications, uteroplacental dysfunction, or fetal growth restriction.
38 with CHD, cardiac dysfunction may compromise uteroplacental flow and contribute to the increased inci
39 ortisol levels were positively correlated to uteroplacental glucose consumption and inversely related
40 ing stress, cortisol-dependent regulation of uteroplacental glycolysis may allow increased maternal c
41 at maternal cortisol concentrations regulate uteroplacental glycolytic metabolism, producing lactate
42 ce growth in fetal sheep, its effects on the uteroplacental handling and delivery of nutrients remain
43 n and SA remodeling, as well as with altered uteroplacental hemodynamics and placental nitrosative st
48 t intrauterine growth retardation induced by uteroplacental insufficiency 1) affects the hepatic epig
53 lone increased cerebral cAMP levels, whereas uteroplacental insufficiency and subsequent hypoxia decr
54 apoptosis in fetal rats exposed initially to uteroplacental insufficiency and subsequent hypoxic stre
55 he onset of hyperglycemia, and indicate that uteroplacental insufficiency causes a primary defect in
59 ctive was to determine the global effects of uteroplacental insufficiency upon cerebral gene expressi
61 of maternal uterine artery ligation causing uteroplacental insufficiency with asymmetrical intrauter
64 ing a normalization volume 10 mm outside the uteroplacental interface and compared against the Virtua
65 ammatory granulocytes and macrophages at the uteroplacental interface and upregulation of proinflamma
66 acterize the complex cellular changes at the uteroplacental interface in placenta accreta spectrum.
67 ing in a build up of apoptotic bodies at the uteroplacental interface that elicits a local immune res
68 ume was measured on the vasculature from the uteroplacental interface to a depth 5 mm into the placen
71 , maternal hyperoxia in the setting of acute uteroplacental ischemia-hypoxia does not appear to cause
72 e raised chronically, prolonged elevation of uteroplacental lactate production may compromise fetal w
75 that cortisol is physiological regulator of uteroplacental metabolism and nutrient delivery to the s
78 han saline-treated ewes (P < 0.05), although uteroplacental O2 consumption was unaffected by maternal
80 growth under hypoxic conditions by improving uteroplacental perfusion and thereby justify further inv
83 tions facilitate the progressive increase in uteroplacental perfusion that is required for normal fet
84 rophoblast invasion, a process necessary for uteroplacental perfusion, in an extracellular signal-reg
85 imetic glyceryl trinitrate prevented altered uteroplacental perfusion, LPS-induced inflammation, plac
91 d as a potential candidate for the disturbed uteroplacental remodeling, leading to hypertension and e
96 nges in oxygen availability to the fetus and uteroplacental tissues may contribute to the ontogenic i
97 rd a more anti-inflammatory phenotype in the uteroplacental tissues of infected mice contributed to b
99 e taken up by the uterus was consumed by the uteroplacental tissues while less was transferred to the
100 psia-like symptoms, caused hypoxic injury in uteroplacental tissues, and elevated soluble fms-like ty
101 ed, a greater proportion was consumed by the uteroplacental tissues, so net fetal glucose uptake was
102 stimulating an inflammatory response of the uteroplacental tissues, while minimizing PTB in control
106 thophysiologic changes that occur within the uteroplacental unit and fetus is essential to identifyin
109 bsence of functional FasL affects pregnancy, uteroplacental units from homozygous matings of gld mice
110 ma (PPAR-gamma) is an important regulator of uteroplacental vascular development and function and has
111 pregnancy to enhance NO bioactivity, improve uteroplacental vascular function and increase fetal grow
112 Whilst mechanisms underpinning impaired uteroplacental vascular function are not fully understoo
113 in many experimental models of FGR, impaired uteroplacental vascular function is implicated, leading