Compression sutures placed into the postpartum uterus may provide a simple first surgical step to control bleeding when routine oxytocic measures have failed. We suggest that the technique we have described is a simple procedure and should be tried before more complex interventions are used.
Objective To compare the in vitro effect of plasma from normal pregnant women and women with pre-eclampsia on the endothelium-dependent behaviour of myometrial resistance arteries from normal pregnant women.
DesignSetting Nottingham City Hospital.Sample Uterine biopsy specimens were obtained from normal pregnant women delivered by elective caesarean section at term. Plasma was collected from nulliparous women with pre-eclampsia (n = 18), and from multiparous normal pregnant women (n = 18), all samples being matched for maternal age and gestation at venepuncture. Pools of plasma from women with pre-eclampsia and normal pregnant women were formed from these samples and were used in all the experiments.Methods Myometrial resistance vessels obtained from the uterine biopsies were incubated with normal pregnant plasma, plasma from women with pre-eclampsia, or without plasma. Wire myography was employed to study the effect of plasma on the endothelium-dependent behaviour of these vessels.Results Incubation of vessels from normal pregnant women with plasma from women with pre-eclampsia resulted in a significant reduction in endothelium-dependent relaxation, compared with vessels incubated either with plasma from normal pregnant women or without plasma. This alteration in endothelial function occurred after an incubation period of one hour and required a threshold concentration for its effect to become established. Removal of the vascular endothelium abolished these changes in vessel behaviour. There were no plasma-induced alterations in the endothelium-independent behaviour of the vascular smooth muscle.This study supports the hypothesis that plasma from women with pre-eclampsia is capable of altering endothelium-dependent myometrial relaxation in vessels from pregnant women.
The hand-held vacuum delivery system is a functionally effective addition to the practitioners' "armory," providing an alternative to the standard metal and silastic cups.
In vivo microvascular vasodilator responses to acetylcholine are increased in women with pre-eclampsia, while endothelial-independent vasodilation is unchanged. Although the mechanism of acetylcholine induced vasodilation in small vessels is unclear, this study confirms previous animal data and provides in vivo evidence of altered microvascular endothelial cell function in pre-eclampsia.
It has been proposed that endothelial cell activation is the primary event in the multisystem disorder of preeclampsia. Evidence for endothelial involvement in this condition abounds. The best-characterized morphologic abnormality of this syndrome, glomerular endotheliosis, involves endothelial cells. Also associated with preeclampsia is a loss of endothelial cell integrity, with the consequent increase in vascular permeability, and an increase in the circulating levels of the endothelial cell markers, fibronectin, von Willebrand factor, tissue plasminogen activator, and plasminogen activator inhibitor-1. It is now well documented that endothelial activation contributes to the coagulation abnormalities observed in this disease. There is much evidence that the endothelial alterations in preeclampsia result from one or more circulating factors. The incubation of cultured endothelial cells with serum or plasma samples, taken from normal pregnant women and women with preeclampsia, results in marked alterations in cell behavior and metabolic processes. More recently, experiments employing myographic techniques have demonstrated convincingly the effects of a circulating factor(s) on the function of endothelial cells of resistance arteries. Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) possesses many of the characteristics required of a candidate circulating factor. It contains a hydrophobic secretory signal sequence, exerts in vitro effects specific to vascular endothelial cell, and promotes endothelial expression of procoagulant activity. Circulating VEGF concentrations are elevated in women with preeclampsia, and VEGF increases microvascular endothelial cell prostacyclin production in a dose-dependent manner, analogous to the acute effects of plasma from patients with preeclampsia. Similarly, in myographic studies, when myometrial resistance arteries are incubated with VEGF, there are dose-dependent alterations in endothelium-dependent behavior, mirroring those found after incubation with plasma from patients with preeclampsia.
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