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Acute cord occlusion increases blood ionized magnesium concentration in preterm fetal sheep during maternal magnesium sulfate exposure
Authors:Reynolds J D  Grubbs E G  Dexter F  Punnahitananda S  Dense T A  Penning D H
Affiliation:Department of Anesthesiology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC 27710, USA.
Abstract:This study tested the hypothesis that a pathophysiologic insult to the fetus that decreases pH (umbilical cord occlusion) produces an increase in physiologically active (i.e., ionized) magnesium concentration. Preterm pregnant sheep (n = 7) were instrumented with maternal and fetal catheters and an inflatable vascular occluder was placed around the umbilical cord. After a 2-day recovery period, each ewe received a 4-g loading dose, followed by continuous intravenous infusion of 1 g magnesium sulfate/h. After 48 h, an episode of acute fetal distress was produced by inflation of the umbilical occluder for 10 min. Maternal and fetal arterial blood samples were collected at regular intervals to quantitate ionized magnesium concentration and monitor physiologic status. Magnesium sulfate infusion increased maternal and fetal blood ionized magnesium concentration. In vitro blood analysis demonstrated that there was a linear inverse correlation (r2 = 0.99) between fetal sheep blood pH and ionized magnesium concentration. In vivo, 10 min of umbilical cord occlusion produced an increase in fetal blood ionized magnesium concentration in all animals (P = 0.02) that was temporally related to the decrease in fetal blood pH. Whether this increase in physiologically active magnesium concentration is beneficial (via neuroprotection) or deleterious (via suppression of stress response) to the distressed fetus remains to be determined.
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