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  • Title: Oestrone, oestradiol-17beta and oestriol levels in human foetal plasma during gestation and at term.
    Author: Shutt DA, Smith ID, Shearman RP.
    Journal: J Endocrinol; 1974 Feb; 60(2):333-41. PubMed ID: 4815987.
    Abstract:
    Marked rises in both unconjugated and sulphoconjugated estrone, estradiol-17-beta and estriol were observed in human fetal plasma between midgestation and term. Significant arterio-venous differences were found in the umbilical cord plasma. No consistent arterio-venous differences were found in the umbilical cord plasma. This indicates that all 3 estrogens are secreted from the placenta into the fetal circulation in the unconjugated form. Mean unconjugated estrogen (estrone + estradiol-17-beta + estriol) levels rose from 22.7 ng/ml at 17-20 weeks of gestation to 108.9 ng/ml at term in umbilical venous plasma and from 4.3 ng/ml to 23.3 ng/ml in umbilical arterial plasma. This represents a secretion rate of approximately 30 mg estrogen/day into the umbilical vein at term. Mean estrogen sulphate levels rose from 128 ng/ml to 313 ng/ml in the cord plasma during the same period. Of the 3 estrogens measured, estriol was quantitatively the major estrogen in fetal plasma. It consistently represented about 78% of the unconjugated fraction and 95% of the sulphate fraction at all stages of gestation. The method of delivery did not have a significant effect on the estrogen levels in uncomplicated pregnancies. Similar estrogen levels were found in fetal heart blood after either hysterotomy at spontaneous abortion at 16-20 weeks of gestation, and no significant differences were found for estrogen levels in cord plasma after elective Caesarean section at 38-39 weeks when compared with estrogen levels after normal delivery at term. A significant rise in fetal unconjugated estrogens at a time when fetal corticosteroids are increasing may be of physiological importance for fetal maturation in women.
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