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Title: Metabolism of glucose by fetus and placenta of sheep. The effects of normal fluctuations in uterine blood flow. Author: Gu W, Jones CT, Harding JE. Journal: J Dev Physiol; 1987 Aug; 9(4):369-89. PubMed ID: 3655221. Abstract: The metabolism by the fetus and placenta of [2-3H, U-14C]glucose infused into fetal sheep has been studied. Uptake of glucose from the fetus by the placenta and transfer to the ewe, as well as placental metabolism of glucose to fructose and lactate have been quantified. About two-thirds of the glucose removed from the fetal circulation was taken up by placenta. Less than 15% of this passed back into the maternal circulation, the remainder was converted, at roughly equivalent rates, into lactate and fructose, most of which was transferred back to the fetus. It seems likely that little of this glucose is oxidised by the placenta. This data indicates that there are substrate cycles between the placenta and fetus, one possible function of which is to limit fetal glucose loss back to the mother; lactate and fructose have limited placental permeability. At uterine blood flow rates in the middle of the normal range net glucose uptake by the placenta from the maternal circulation was about 7-fold higher than that from the fetus. About 20% of this was transported to the fetus, 50% was oxidised and much of the remainder converted to lactate and transferred back to the ewe. Labelling patterns in fructose and lactate make it unlikely that this placental pool of glucose mixes freely with that derived from uptake from the fetus. Net movement of glucose across the placenta is markedly influenced by fluctuations in uterine blood flow over the normal range of 500-3000 ml/min. At low flow rates there is net output of glucose from the fetus to the placenta, and in some instances from the placenta to the ewe, i.e. there is evidence of net utero-placental production of glucose to the ewe separate from output by the fetus. There is a close linear relationship between uterine glucose supply (maternal arterial concentration x uterine blood flow) and net balance across the placenta. As uterine supply of glucose falls there is increased uptake by the placenta of glucose from the fetal circulation and corresponding enhanced recycling of fructose and lactate to the fetus. This production of fructose and lactate by the placenta may function to reduce glucose loss from the fetus to the ewe. Hence at high rates of placental uptake of glucose from the fetus placental production of lactate and particularly fructose may approach saturation and allow significant backflow of glucose from the fetus to the ewe. Under these conditions glucose uptake may in part sustain placental oxygen consumption.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]