FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 18, 2009
Contact: Christine Guilfoy
Office: (301) 634-7253
cguilfoy@the-aps.org
Babies Born
to Native High-Altitude Mothers Have Decreased Risk of Low Birth Weight
Genetic
adaption allows Andean women to deliver more blood and oxygen to the
fetus at high altitude compared to women of European descent
BETHESDA, Md. (May 18, 2009) Pregnant women who are indigenous to the
Andes Mountains deliver more blood and oxygen to their fetuses at high
altitude than do women of European descent. The study helps explain why
babies of Andean descent born at high altitude weigh more than European
babies born at altitude.
The research, published in The American Journal of
Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology found that
at high altitude:
-
the uterine artery of Andean women delivered more
blood and oxygen to the fetus compared to women of European descent
-
the babies of Andean women weighed an average of
nine ounces more at birth
-
the greater the mother’s Andean heritage, the
greater the uterine artery blood flow, the greater the oxygen delivery
to the fetus and the greater the baby’s birth weight
These differences between the Andean and European women
and their babies did not exist at low altitude.
The question of why babies born at high altitude are
smaller is not an academic one. Low birthweight is associated with higher
rates of illness and mortality. By understanding this physiology,
researchers hope to find out how to protect from reductions in fetal growth
even in low-oxygen environments.
The study, “Augmented uterine artery blood flow and
oxygen delivery protect Andeans from altitude-associated reductions in fetal
growth.” was done by Colleen Glyde Julian, Megan J. Wilson, Henry Yamashiro
and Lorna G. Moore of the University of Colorado; Wilma Tellez, Armando
Rodriguez and Enrique Vargas of Universidad Mayor de San Andrés, La Paz,
Bolivia; Abigail Bigham and Mark Shriver of Pennsylvania State University;
and Miriam Lopez of Clínica del Sur, La Paz, Bolivia. Dr. Yamashiro is also
affiliated with Clinica Siraní, Santa Cruz de la Sierra, Bolivia and Dr.
Moore is also affiliated with Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North
Carolina.
Birth weight differences
High-altitude pregnancies typically produce lower birth
weight infants, even among women whose families have lived in high altitude
for centuries. However, the babies of these women weigh more at birth
compared to women whose ancestors have not lived at high altitude. European
infants are three times more likely to be born small for their gestational
age compared to Andean babies.
The same is true when comparing groups of women in
other areas of the world, according to Dr. Julian, the study’s lead author.
Native Tibetan women’s babies weigh more than the babies of Han women, a
Chinese population that recently moved to the high altitude of Tibet. It is
not clear what accounts for these differences, but they may occur because of
differences in:
-
how much oxygen the mother is able to deliver
through the uterine artery
-
how much nutrition and/or oxygen the mother is
able to deliver through the placenta
-
a combination of both uterine artery and placental
factors
Most likely, it is both the placenta and the uterine
artery that accounts for these differences between Europeans and Andeans,
Dr. Julian said.
More than 12,000 feet
The study took place in Bolivia and included two
groups: pregnant women living at sea level and pregnant women living in the
Andes Mountains (12,000 to14,000 feet). Each group included women of Andean
and European ancestry. The researchers determined Andean ancestry through a
combination of three methods: genetic testing, interviews and surnames.
The research focused on the uterine artery, which
dilates to increase blood flow to the fetus during pregnancy. The low-oxygen
environment at altitude affects the uterine artery, reducing blood flow and
oxygen delivery to the infant. Reduced blood flow and oxygen slows fetal
metabolism and results in slower growth.
The study predicted that this reduction in blood flow
at altitude would be much less pronounced in the Andean women, who have
adapted genetically to the high altitude. The researchers measured uterine
artery blood flow by ultrasound at 20 weeks and 36 weeks of pregnancy, and
three months post-partum. They also tracked fetal growth across pregnancy
using ultrasound to measure fetal head and abdominal circumference, femur
length and estimated fetal weight. The study found the following:
-
At high altitude, the uterine artery of both
groups dilated less, reflecting the oxygen-poor environment.
-
Among the high-altitude group, the Andean women’s
blood flow was 68% greater at 20 weeks of pregnancy compared to the
non-pregnant state, and the fetuses were larger at this stage. This
suggests that the uterine artery is playing a causal role in the lower
birth weight, as opposed to being a result of having a smaller baby and
needing less oxygen or fewer nutrients, Dr. Julian said.
-
Among the high-altitude group, oxygen delivery to
the fetus was nearly 2-fold greater in the Andean women at week 36.
The researchers also found a relationship at high
altitude between the percent of indigenous Andean ancestry and the uterine
artery blood flow, uterine oxygen delivery, and birth weight. In other
words, the more Andean a woman was, the greater the uterine artery blood
flow, the more nutrients delivered to the infant and the greater the birth
weight.
This research may one day have implications for the
development of therapeutic strategies to increase uterine artery blood flow
or to change the way the blood vessels respond during pregnancies that are
complicated by hypoxia and/or reduced fetal growth.
Editor’s Notes: To arrange an interview with Dr.
Julian, please contact Christine Guilfoy at
cguilfoy@the-aps.org or (301) 634-7253.
You can read the full study online at:
http://ajpregu.physiology.org/cgi/reprint/296/5/R1564?maxtoshow=&HITS=10&hits=10&RESULTFORMAT=&author1=Julian%2C+C&searchid=1&FIRSTINDEX=0&sortspec=relevance&resourcetype=HWCIT
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is the study of how molecules, cells, tissues and organs function to create
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