Title: Fetal programming of metabolic disease
1Fetal programming of metabolic disease
- A stimulus or insult at a critical period of
early life, often when rates of growth are
maximal, leads to irreversible changes in
structure and function of target organs. - Pancreas ? Late onset diabetes
- Kidney? ? Hypertension
- Heart ? Coronary artery disease
- Blood vessels ? Hypertension, atherosclerosis,
stroke
Barker, DJ Clark, PM. (1997) Reviews of
Reproduction, 2 105-112.
2Sheffield Ward
3Relationship between fetal growth retardation and
blood pressure in middle age
Systolic (p 0.0005)
Diastolic (p 0.0001)
Blood PressuremmHg
Birth Weight kg
4Relationship between fetal growth retardation and
arterial stiffness in middle age
PWV ms-1
Aorta (p 0.01)
-2.5
-3
-3.4
gt3.4
Birth Weight kg
Martyn CN et al. British Heart Journal, (1995).
73 116-121.
5Babies
With thanks to Chris Martyn
6What is the mechanism linking reduced birth
weight and increased blood pressure in adult life?
7Hypothesis
- With age, progressive fragmentation and loss of
elastin (which cannot be resynthesised) and
replacement by collagen --gt increased arterial
stiffness --gt increased pulse pressure. - In growth retarded infants elastin synthesis is
reduced in utero, arteries are stiffer than
normal from an early age and never fully recover.
Martyn CN and Greenwald SE. Lancet. 1997 350
953-955.
8Human aortic elastin collagen in early life
Protein ( dry weight)
50
40
30
Elastin
20
Collagen
10
Birth
0
Gestational age (weeks)
Months after birth
Berry CL, et al. (1972) Journal of Pathology.
108 265-274.
9Normal
SUA
10Compliance
Histology
UI present
Compliance /10 mmHg
UI absent
NORMAL
SUA ()
SUA (-)
Meyer WW and Lind J. (1974) Archives of Disease
in Childhood,. 49 671-679.
Berry CL et al. (1976) British Heart Journal, 38
310-315.
11Twin to Twin Transfusion Syndrome (TTTS)
- A natural model of the effects of volume loading
on fetal vascular development.
12TTTS occurs in identical twins
- Most identical twins share a common placenta
(monochorionic). - Of these, 10-15 develop TTTS wherein blood is
unevenly distributed between them. - Thought to be due to the presence of deep
arteriovenous anastomoses within the placenta. - Recipient
- Hypervolaemia, polyuria, polyhydramnios, LV
hypertrophy, systemic hypertension(?), cardiac
malformations. - Donor
- Hypovolaemia, poor renal perfusion, oliguria,
oligohydramnios.
13Prognosis treatment
- Perinatal mortality in 80 to 100 of untreated
cases - Amnioreduction (symptomatic)
- to reduce amniotic fluid volume and pressure
- 60 to 70 survival
- Laser ablation of anastomoses
- to prevent inter-twin transfusion and establish
separate circulations - Better than 70 survival
14Hypothesis
- Previously shown that donor twin has 2x increase
in brachial artery PWV in infancy - Is this due to chronic hypovolaemia and or
abnormal pressure during uterine life? - If so, laser treatment, by restoring normal
pressure and flow, should prevent vascular
remodelling and reduce inter-twin PWV
differences?
15Subjects
- 50 twin pairs (London Hamburg)
- PWV measured in brachioradial artery
- Median corrected postnatal age 11.1 months
- Range 1 week to 64 months
- Ethical approval in both centres
164 groups
TTTS Symptomatically treated (n 14)
No TTTS (n 12)
TTTS laser treated (n 13)
No TTTS Non identical (n 11)
17Variables measured
- Brachial artery PWV
- Birthweight
- Gestational age
- BP differences between twins
- Age at diagnosis
- Mean age at PWV measurement
18PWV donor recipient pairs
PWV ms-1
Symp
Laser
Non TTTS
Non I
TTTS
No TTTS
19PWV differences
Heavier - Lighter ms-1
2
1
0
-1
-2
Symp
Laser
No TTTS
Non I
identical
TTTS
No TTTS
20Limitations
- Milder manifestation of TTTS in conservatively
treated group - Variable onset and duration of TTTS before
treatment - Radial artery compliance may not reflect that of
central arteries and LV load - Cross sectional measurements at different (young)
ages, no idea yet of long term effects
21Conclusions
- Vascular programming seen in identical twins with
TTTS - PWV discordancy altered but not abolished by
intrauterine laser treatment, to resemble that
seen in fraternal twins with separate uterine
circulations
22Hypothesis
- With age, progressive fragmentation and loss of
elastin (which cannot be resynthesised) and
replacement by collagen --gt increased arterial
stiffness --gt increased pulse pressure. - In growth retarded infants elastin synthesis is
reduced in utero, arteries are stiffer than
normal from an early age and never fully recover.
Martyn CN and Greenwald SE. Lancet. 1997 350
953-955.
23Animal model of fetal growth retardation
- Pregnant rats divided into two groups
- Low protein (LP) group given 9 protein diet
- Control group (C) given 18 protein diet,
isocaloric - Offspring weaned at 4 weeks onto normal diet
- Animals killed at 4, 8 and12 weeks
- Measure
- BP or Left ventricular dimensions
- Aortic elasticity chemical composition
Unpublished data
24Left ventricle
25Animal weights
26Aortic Dimensions
Wall cross sectional area mm2
27Aortic stiffness
Einc at ?? 1.3 kPa
28Aortic elastin collagen
29Conclusions
- Reduced body weight, aortic dimensions, elastin
content and increased BP or LV hypertrophy in 4
12 week LP animals is consistent with the
hypothesis that protein deprivation in utero
leads changes in vessel structure and
composition. - The elasticity differences in 4 and 12 week
animals were consistent with the hypothesis.
However the results from the 8 week animals are
not.
30Limitations
- Preliminary study, limited age range
- Lack of in vivo central pressure measurements.
- Applicability of rat model to human in utero
growth retardation?
31Problem
- Is the reduction in aortic elastin content a
cause or a consequence of hypertension?
32Skin stretch for 500 mbar. 60 children aged 10
-11y
Aortic stiffness (arbitrary units)
5.0
4.5
4.0
Plt0.01
3.5
3.0
2.5
Max stretch (mm)
33- Why do large arteries get stiffer with age?
- Fatigue failure of irreplaceable elastin
- (and atherosclerosis)
- What are the consequences?
- Increased pulse pressure
- Increased peak load on the heart and conduit
arteries - (and premature failure?)
34Fingerprints and hypertension
35Palmar angle
a
c
b
Palmar angle abc
363 basic types of fingerprint pattern
From Holt S. Quantitative genetics of
fingerprint patterns. Br. Med. Bull. 1961 17247
37Fingerprint results
ATD angle ()
gt43
Systolic BP
No. of whorls on right hand
38Fingerprint Summary
- Blood pressure in middle age is strongly
correlated with number of finger whorls - Inversely correlated with palmar angle
Godfrey et al. BMJ 307, 405-409 (1993)
39Death By Old Age
Case Sex Age Occupation Findings
1 F 101 Laundress Cardiac hypertrophy and degeneration. Severe generalized arteriosclerosis
2 F 101 University professor Bronchopneumonia, influenza, cardiac hypertrophy, coronary sclerosis
3 M 102 Rabbi Cardiac hypertrophy, fibrosis, generalized arteriosclerosis
4 M 102 Restaurant owner Cardiac hypertrophy, fibrosis, coronaryvalvular sclerosis
5 M 106 Shepherd Bronchopneumonia, cardiac hypertrophy, fibrosis, fibrinous pericarditis, coronary sclerosis
2 F 101 University professor Bronchopneumonia, influenza, cardiac hypertrophy, coronary sclerosis
3 M 102 Rabbi Cardiac hypertrophy, fibrosis, generalized arteriosclerosis
4 M 102 Restaurant owner Cardiac hypertrophy, fibrosis, coronaryvalvular sclerosis
Robert L. Exp Gerontol 1999, 34491-501.
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