• Title of article

    Placental angioarchitecture in monochorionic twin pregnancies: Relationship to fetal growth, fetofetal transfusion syndrome, and pregnancy outcome,

  • Author/Authors

    Mark L. Denbow، نويسنده , , PHILIP COX، نويسنده , , Myles Taylor، نويسنده , , Donna M. Hammal، نويسنده , , Nicholas M. Fisk، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
  • Pages
    10
  • From page
    417
  • To page
    426
  • Abstract
    Objective: We sought to correlate placental vasculature with fetal growth and outcome in monochorionic twins. Study Design: Eighty-two patients with consecutive monochorionic pregnancies underwent biweekly ultrasonography for determination of fetal growth and well-being. After delivery, blinded placental injection studies delineated vascular anastomoses and territory share. Degree of balance in arteriovenous anastomoses equaled the number of arteriovenous anastomoses in one direction minus the number in the other. Results: Pregnancies affected by fetofetal transfusion syndrome (n = 21) had numbers of arteriovenous and venovenous anastomoses that were similar to those in pregnancies without fetofetal transfusion syndrome but fewer arterioarterial anastomoses (P< .0001). Fetofetal transfusion syndrome occurred in 78% of pregnancies with ≥1 arteriovenous and no arterioarterial anastomoses. Birth weight discordancy correlated with placental territory discordancy (P< .0001) and the degree of balance in arteriovenous anastomoses (P = .004). The larger placental share twin had a greater growth velocity than its smaller placental share co-twin (P = .008) for all but one anastomotic pattern. Where arteriovenous anastomoses were aligned with the net venous outflow to the fetus with the smaller territory, co-twins had similar birth weights and growth velocities irrespective of placental share. Fetal survival was higher in pregnancies with an arterioarterial anastomosis (P = .01) but lower with a venovenous anastomosis (P= .01). Survival of both fetuses was inversely associated with birth weight discordancy (P< .0001). Conclusion: Although interrelationships among the various types of anastomoses are complex, our data suggest that the placental territory share and the pattern of arteriovenous anastomoses influence fetal growth, that arterioarterial anastomoses protect against fetofetal transfusion syndrome, and that venovenous anastomoses reduce perinatal survival. (Am J Obstet Gynecol 2000;182:417-26.)
  • Keywords
    Monochorionic twinning , twin-twin transfusion , placental anastomoses
  • Journal title
    American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology
  • Serial Year
    2000
  • Journal title
    American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology
  • Record number

    640687