Causes and consequences of placental growth retardation
R. L. Naeye
Placental growth retardation caused 84 fetal and neonatal deaths per
100,000 births. Its frequency increased as mothers' diastolic blood
pressure levels increased, an effect augmented by proteinuria. The
perinatal deaths also increased with advancing maternal age, anemia, and
poverty. Maternal weight gains were low in the involved pregnancies, and
the fetuses and neonates who died had a pattern of growth retardation
characteristic of fetal undernutrition. Microscopic abnormalities in the
decidua and placenta were characteristic of inadequate perfusion of the
placenta from the uterus. They included fibrinoid changes in the arteries
and arterioles of the decidua, villous cytotrophoblastic hyperplasia, and
an obliterative endarteritis in fetal stem arteries of the placenta.