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  • Title: Fetal sex dependency of maternal vascular adaptation to pregnancy: a prospective population-based cohort study.
    Author: Broere-Brown ZA, Schalekamp-Timmermans S, Hofman A, Jaddoe V, Steegers E.
    Journal: BJOG; 2016 Jun; 123(7):1087-95. PubMed ID: 26179828.
    Abstract:
    OBJECTIVE: To investigate fetal sex dependency of maternal vascular adaptation to pregnancy as assessed by uteroplacental vascular resistance and maternal blood pressure. DESIGN: Prospective population-based cohort study. SETTING: Rotterdam, the Netherlands. POPULATION: In total, 8224 liveborn singleton pregnancies were included. METHODS: Maternal vascular adaptation was assessed in all trimesters of pregnancy. Pregnancies were stratified into being either complicated by the placental syndrome (i.e. pre-eclampsia, fetal growth restriction or preterm birth, n = 1229) or uncomplicated (n = 6995). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: First trimester: blood pressures. Second trimester: blood pressures, pulsatility index of the uterine artery (PI-UtA). Third trimester: blood pressures, PI-UtA, presence of notching in the uterine artery. RESULTS: In women carrying a male fetus PI-UtA was higher than in women with a female fetus in the total group (second trimester P < 0.001, third trimester P = 0.005). Effect estimates differed between women with or without the placental syndrome. In the total group, women with a male fetus more often showed notching in the Doppler resistance pattern (odds ratio 1.42, 95% confidence interval 1.17-1.72). Different blood pressure patterns were observed between pregnant women with a male fetus and pregnant women with a female fetus and between complicated pregnancies and uncomplicated pregnancies. CONCLUSION: Fetal sex is significantly associated with maternal vascular adaptation to pregnancy with differential effects in uncomplicated pregnancies and in pregnancies complicated by the placental syndrome. TWEETABLE ABSTRACT: Fetal sex is significantly associated with maternal vascular adaptation to pregnancy.
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