Morphological state of aorta in the fetuses and newborns suffered from chronic intrauterine hypoxia (experimental research)

The cardiovascular system in newborns with chronic hypoxia is affected in 40–70%. Aim. To investigate morphological state of aorta in the fetuses and newborns suffered from chronic intrauterine hypoxia. Methods and results. Aortic wall was investigated with modern morphological methods in 34 l...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: O. V. Kaluzhina
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Zaporozhye State Medical University 2015-04-01
Series:Patologìâ
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pat.zsmu.edu.ua/article/view/42818/39222
id doaj-315d90686f4c4c899f0eef0f07ccb6be
record_format Article
spelling doaj-315d90686f4c4c899f0eef0f07ccb6be2020-11-25T00:17:10ZengZaporozhye State Medical UniversityPatologìâ2306-80272310-12372015-04-011171910.14739/2310-1237.2015.1.42818Morphological state of aorta in the fetuses and newborns suffered from chronic intrauterine hypoxia (experimental research)O. V. KaluzhinaThe cardiovascular system in newborns with chronic hypoxia is affected in 40–70%. Aim. To investigate morphological state of aorta in the fetuses and newborns suffered from chronic intrauterine hypoxia. Methods and results. Aortic wall was investigated with modern morphological methods in 34 laboratory animals in order to identify the morphological features of the fetuses and newborns’ vessel affected by this pathogenic factor. It was established that chronic hypoxia leads to endothelial trophics deterioration, its flattening, dystrophic processes with following cells desquamation, density reduction of smooth muscle cells, thickening of the intima-media. Conclusion. It shows alterative-sclerotic changes in aorta in cases with chronic hypoxia influence. http://pat.zsmu.edu.ua/article/view/42818/39222HypoxiaPregnancyAortaAnimal Experimentation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author O. V. Kaluzhina
spellingShingle O. V. Kaluzhina
Morphological state of aorta in the fetuses and newborns suffered from chronic intrauterine hypoxia (experimental research)
Patologìâ
Hypoxia
Pregnancy
Aorta
Animal Experimentation
author_facet O. V. Kaluzhina
author_sort O. V. Kaluzhina
title Morphological state of aorta in the fetuses and newborns suffered from chronic intrauterine hypoxia (experimental research)
title_short Morphological state of aorta in the fetuses and newborns suffered from chronic intrauterine hypoxia (experimental research)
title_full Morphological state of aorta in the fetuses and newborns suffered from chronic intrauterine hypoxia (experimental research)
title_fullStr Morphological state of aorta in the fetuses and newborns suffered from chronic intrauterine hypoxia (experimental research)
title_full_unstemmed Morphological state of aorta in the fetuses and newborns suffered from chronic intrauterine hypoxia (experimental research)
title_sort morphological state of aorta in the fetuses and newborns suffered from chronic intrauterine hypoxia (experimental research)
publisher Zaporozhye State Medical University
series Patologìâ
issn 2306-8027
2310-1237
publishDate 2015-04-01
description The cardiovascular system in newborns with chronic hypoxia is affected in 40–70%. Aim. To investigate morphological state of aorta in the fetuses and newborns suffered from chronic intrauterine hypoxia. Methods and results. Aortic wall was investigated with modern morphological methods in 34 laboratory animals in order to identify the morphological features of the fetuses and newborns’ vessel affected by this pathogenic factor. It was established that chronic hypoxia leads to endothelial trophics deterioration, its flattening, dystrophic processes with following cells desquamation, density reduction of smooth muscle cells, thickening of the intima-media. Conclusion. It shows alterative-sclerotic changes in aorta in cases with chronic hypoxia influence.
topic Hypoxia
Pregnancy
Aorta
Animal Experimentation
url http://pat.zsmu.edu.ua/article/view/42818/39222
work_keys_str_mv AT ovkaluzhina morphologicalstateofaortainthefetusesandnewbornssufferedfromchronicintrauterinehypoxiaexperimentalresearch
_version_ 1725380584534966272