Vatten Lars J, Skjaerven Rolv
Department of Public Health and General Practice, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, NO-7489 Trondheim, Norway.
Early Hum Dev. 2004 Jan;76(1):47-54. doi: 10.1016/j.earlhumdev.2003.10.006.
It takes a higher number of male than female embryos to produce a live born infant. The unbalanced pregnancy survival by offspring sex may also be reflected in higher proportion of preterm male births, and in unbalanced sex distribution in certain pregnancy conditions, such as preeclampsia.
We used data from the Medical Birth Registry of Norway, a population-based registry that has recorded births since 1967. For this study, we used information on offspring sex and length of gestation that was available for 1691053 (92.8%) singleton births among a total of 1822982 births from 1967 to 1998. We estimated sex ratios and perinatal mortality by length of gestation, and assessed whether the ratio of offspring sex in preeclampsia varied by length of gestation.
For preterm births, there was a strong male dominance. Within five categories of gestational age between 16 and 36 weeks, the male/female ratios were 2.48, 1.26, 1.28, 1.32, and 1.28. At weeks 37-39, the sex ratio was 1.17, but at weeks 40-42 the number of male and female births was practically identical (sex ratio 1.00). Over all, the male/female ratio was 1.06. Perinatal mortality was consistently higher in males across the whole range of gestational age; in total it was 21% (95% CI, 18-25%) higher in male offspring. In preeclampsia with preterm delivery (<37 weeks), the sex ratio was reversed: female offspring was substantially more common than males (sex ratio 0.87), but in preeclampsia with delivery at term (37-42 weeks), the proportion of males was higher (sex ratio 1.06) than for females.
The sex differences by length of gestation and in preeclampsia may reflect that male embryos are subject to stronger intrauterine selection forces than females. Possibly, implantation may be the critical event, where offspring sex may be one of the factors that determine success.
要生出一名活产婴儿,所需的男性胚胎数量多于女性胚胎。按后代性别划分的妊娠存活不平衡情况也可能反映在早产男婴比例较高,以及某些妊娠状况(如先兆子痫)下的性别分布不平衡上。
我们使用了挪威医疗出生登记处的数据,这是一个基于人群的登记处,自1967年以来记录了出生情况。在本研究中,我们使用了1967年至1998年期间1822982例出生中1691053例(92.8%)单胎出生的后代性别和妊娠时长信息。我们按妊娠时长估算了性别比和围产期死亡率,并评估了先兆子痫中后代性别的比例是否随妊娠时长而变化。
对于早产,男性占主导地位。在16至36周的五个孕周类别中,男/女比例分别为2.48、1.26、1.28、1.32和1.28。在37 - 39周时,性别比为1.17,但在40 - 42周时,男女生出生数量几乎相同(性别比为1.00)。总体而言,男/女比例为1.06。在整个孕周范围内,男性的围产期死亡率一直较高;总体而言,男性后代的围产期死亡率比女性高21%(95%可信区间,18 - 25%)。在早产(<37周)的先兆子痫中,性别比相反:女性后代比男性更常见(性别比0.87),但在足月分娩(37 - 42周)的先兆子痫中,男性的比例更高(性别比1.06),高于女性。
孕周和先兆子痫方面的性别差异可能反映出男性胚胎比女性胚胎受到更强的宫内选择压力。可能,着床可能是关键事件,在此过程中后代性别可能是决定成功的因素之一。