Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

Capillary volume fraction is the principal determinant of villous membrane thickness in the normal human placenta at term.

23

Citations

0

References

1992

Year

Abstract

The thickness of the villous membrane is known to be an important factor in determining the morphometric diffusing capacity of the placenta at term. As yet it is not certain how areas of the villous membrane specialised for gaseous exchange, the vasculo-syncytial membranes, differentiate. One mechanism suggested is that they arise through obtrusion of the fetal capillaries contained within the stromal core. As a result the bulk of the overlying trophoblast is displaced laterally, reducing the thickness of the villous membrane to as little as 1-2 microns at these points. To test this hypothesis the relationship between the vascularity of the villi, as determined by the villous capillary volume fraction, and the mean thickness of the villous membrane was investigated. Data were taken from a recent study in which placental villi were biopsied from normal term placentae within 1 min of caesarean delivery and at 5, 10, 15 and 20 min thereafter. Since intuitively the membrane has both a maximum and a minimum thickness a sigmoid relationship was fitted to the data using least squares regression analysis. Estimates of arithmetic and harmonic mean thicknesses were then predicted from the capillary volume fraction for a large number of placentae using data from previous studies. These all employed similar stereological techniques but were performed over a number of years by several workers in this laboratory. The predicted values were tested against the measured values using paired 't' tests, but no significant differences (P greater than 0.05) were detected.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)