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Obstetrics & Gynecology 1999;93:527-531
© 1999 by The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists
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ORIGINAL RESEARCH

Altered Cord Serum Lipid Levels Associated With Small for Gestational Age Infants

JEFFREY N. JONES, MD, CICEK GERCEL-TAYLOR, PhD and DOUGLAS D. TAYLOR, PhD

From the Departments of Obstetrics and Gynecology and Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Louisville School of Medicine, Louisville, Kentucky.

Address reprint requests to: Douglas D. Taylor, PhD, Division of Gynecologic Oncology, University of Louisville School of Medicine, 511 South Floyd Street, MDR 420, Louisville, KY 40202, E-mail: ddtaylor{at}juno.com

Objective: To determine whether small for gestational age (SGA) infants show changes in lipid metabolism that could distinguish growth-restricted subpopulations.

Methods: Sera from the arterial cord blood from 38 SGA infants were analyzed for apolipoprotein A-I level, total lipid content, and distribution of those lipids as triglycerides, diglycerides, free fatty acids, and phospholipids. Comparisons were made between appropriate for gestational age (AGA) controls (n = 25), SGA infants with a ponderal index below the tenth percentile (SGA I, n = 20), and SGA infants with a ponderal index above the tenth percentile (SGA II, n =18).

Results: Total cord serum lipid content was markedly decreased in all SGA infants compared with AGA infants (2.8 times lower). Although SGA infants showed total lipid concentration decreases, SGA I and SGA II infants showed distinct characteristics. Infants in the SGA I group had higher triglyceride levels (1.8 times higher) and lower free fatty acid levels (1.4 times lower), compared with AGA infants (P < .001). The lipid subclass distribution in SGA II infants was not significantly different from that in AGA infants, with the exception of an increase in triglyceride concentrations (1.3 times higher). Although the 22-kD placenta-derived apolipoprotein A-I was similar in all groups, the level of fetal liver–derived 28-kD apolipoprotein A-I was 6.5 times lower in SGA I infants than in AGA or SGA II infants (P < .001).

Conclusion: The SGA I infants appeared to have impaired utilization of circulating triglycerides, consistent with peripheral adipose depletion. Diminished fetus-derived apolipoprotein A-I levels with normal levels of placenta-derived apolipoprotein A-I levels might indicate a defect in the production or secretion of apolipoproteins associated with growth restriction.




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