Publication | Closed Access
Calcium Metabolism in Normal Human Pregnancy
362
Citations
1
References
1971
Year
NutritionFertilityGynecologyFetal HealthOsteoporosisReproductive EndocrinologyNormal Human PregnancyMaternal NutritionPublic HealthMineral MetabolismPlacental DevelopmentInfertilityMaternal HealthPool TurnoverMaternal-fetal MedicineEndocrinologyBone MetabolismPregnancy NutritionPhysiologyMost Skeletal MineralizationPregnancyPregnant WomenMetabolismMedicine
Maternal calcium adjustments during pregnancy are thought to arise from interactions among placental lactogen, estrogens, and parathyroid hormone. The study measured calcium kinetics in 15 pregnant and 9 control women using the stable isotope 48Ca and neutron activation analysis. Pregnancy increases nitrogen, phosphorus, and calcium retention, expands the miscible calcium pool by 20%, doubles pool turnover and bone mineral accretion, and doubles intestinal calcium absorption, with all changes normalizing within three months after delivery.
Fifteen normal pregnant women and 9 female controls of similar age underwent mineral balance and calcium kinetic studies during and after pregnancy. 48Ca, a stable isotope, was employed in the pregnant women and specimens were measured by neutron activation analysis. Results were related to stage of pregnancy and demonstrated the expected and well documented retention of nitrogen, phosphorus, and calcium associated with fetal development. In addition, there was a 20% increase in miscible calcium pool by term, and an approximate doubling of both pool turnover and bone mineral accretion rates, both rising progressively with duration of pregnancy. Intestinal calcium absorption was twice usual normal levels from the earliest period studied and remained high throughout pregnancy. Virtually all these changes reverted to normal non-pregnant levels by 3 months after delivery. The importance of maternal adjustments as a component in these changes was emphasized by the presence of significant changes in accretion, turnover, and calcium absorption well in advance of the time when most skeletal mineralization occurs in the fetus and by the partial persistence of elevation of these functions for a few weeks after delivery. High doses of both estrogen and progesterone given to a single normal woman for 7 weeks failed to reproduce the changes observed in actual pregnancy. The basis for these anticipatory maternal adjustments is speculated to be an interaction between placental lactogen, estrogens, and parathyroid hormone.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1