Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

High-altitude population neonatal and maternal phenotypes associated with birthweight protection

Padma Dolma, P. T. Angchuk, Vandana Jain, Vatsla Dadhwal, Dalvir Kular, David Williams, Hugh Montgomery, Sara Hillman

Pediatric Research · 2021

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Summary

BACKGROUND: States which reduce foetal oxygen delivery are associated with impaired intrauterine growth. Hypoxia results when barometric pressure falls with ascent to altitude, and with it the partial pressure of inspired oxygen ('hypobaric hypoxia'). birthweight is reduced when native lowlanders gestate at such high altitude (HA)-an effect mitigated in native (millennia) HA populations. Studying HA populations offer a route to explore the mechanisms by which hypoxia impacts foetal growth. METHODS: Between February 2017 and January 2019, we prospectively studied 316 pregnant women, in Leh, Ladakh (altitude 3524 m, where oxygen partial pressure is reduced by 1/3) and 101 pregnant women living in Delhi (low altitude, 216 m above sea level). RESULTS: Of Ladakhi HA newborns, 14% were small for

Subject
Maternal, infant & child nutrition
Source type
Peer-reviewed study
System type
Other
DOI
10.1038/s41390-021-01593-5
Catalogue ID
BFmommpb3e-zx6wu1
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