Parkington Helena C, Kenna Kelly R, Sozo Foula, Coleman Harold A, Bocking Alan, Brien James F, Harding Richard, Walker David W, Morley Ruth, Tare Marianne
Departments of Physiology, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria, 3800, Australia
Departments of Physiology, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria, 3800, Australia.
J Physiol. 2014 Jun 15;592(12):2591-603. doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.2013.262873. Epub 2014 Apr 22.
While the impact of alcohol consumption by pregnant women on fetal neurodevelopment has received much attention, the effects on the cardiovascular system are not well understood. We hypothesised that repeated exposure to alcohol (ethanol) in utero would alter fetal arterial reactivity and wall stiffness, key mechanisms leading to cardiovascular disease in adulthood. Ethanol (0.75 g (kg body weight)(-1)) was infused intravenously into ewes over 1 h daily for 39 days in late pregnancy (days 95-133 of pregnancy, term ∼147 days). Maternal and fetal plasma ethanol concentrations at the end of the hour were ∼115 mg dl(-1), and then declined to apparent zero over 8 h. At necropsy (day 134), fetal body weight and fetal brain-body weight ratio were not affected by alcohol infusion. Small arteries (250-300 μm outside diameter) from coronary, renal, mesenteric, femoral (psoas) and cerebral beds were isolated. Endothelium-dependent vasodilatation sensitivity was reduced 10-fold in coronary resistance arteries, associated with a reduction in endothelial nitric oxide synthase mRNA (P = 0.008). Conversely, vasodilatation sensitivity was enhanced 10-fold in mesenteric and renal resistance arteries. Arterial stiffness was markedly increased (P = 0.0001) in all five vascular beds associated with an increase in elastic modulus and, in cerebral vessels, with an increase in collagen Iα mRNA. Thus, we show for the first time that fetal arteries undergo marked and regionally variable adaptations as a consequence of repeated alcohol exposure. These alcohol-induced vascular effects occurred in the apparent absence of fetal physical abnormalities or fetal growth restriction.
虽然孕妇饮酒对胎儿神经发育的影响已受到广泛关注,但其对心血管系统的影响却尚未得到充分了解。我们推测,子宫内反复接触酒精(乙醇)会改变胎儿动脉反应性和血管壁硬度,而这是导致成年后患心血管疾病的关键机制。在妊娠晚期(妊娠第95 - 133天,足月约147天),每天1小时内将乙醇(0.75 g/(kg体重)⁻¹)静脉输注到母羊体内,持续39天。输注结束时母羊和胎儿血浆乙醇浓度约为115 mg/dl⁻¹,然后在8小时内降至几乎为零。尸检时(第134天),胎儿体重和胎儿脑体重比不受酒精输注影响。分离出冠状动脉、肾动脉、肠系膜动脉、股(腰大肌)动脉和脑动脉床的小动脉(外径250 - 300μm)。冠状动脉阻力动脉中内皮依赖性血管舒张敏感性降低了10倍,同时内皮型一氧化氮合酶mRNA减少(P = 0.008)。相反,肠系膜和肾阻力动脉中的血管舒张敏感性增强了10倍。所有五个血管床的动脉硬度均显著增加(P = 0.0001),这与弹性模量增加有关,在脑血管中还与Iα型胶原蛋白mRNA增加有关。因此,我们首次表明,反复接触酒精会导致胎儿动脉发生显著的、区域特异性的适应性变化。这些酒精诱导的血管效应在胎儿明显没有身体异常或生长受限的情况下发生。