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Blood flow and oxygen consumption of the pregnant uterus
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1961
Year
FertilityGynecologyHigh-risk PregnancyReproductive PhysiologyBlood FlowPregnant UterusPublic HealthO 2Animal PhysiologyInfertilityMaternal HealthMaternal-fetal MedicineEndocrinologyAnimal ReproductionTheriogenologyAnimal SciencePhysiologyPregnancyMedicineAnesthesiology
The 4-aminoantipyrine method was employed for measuring rate of blood flow per kilogram of tissue in the pregnant uterus of anesthetized goats. A uterine vein was cannulated, but no other manipulation or disturbance of the uterus occurred. Uterine blood flow was high in the nonpregnant uterus and in early pregnancy but fell to a plateau of 277 ml/kg/min. at midpregnancy. (A-V)O 2 was minimal in the first quarter of pregnancy and rose to a plateau also by midpregnancy. Rate of O 2 consumption per kilogram was relatively high in the nonpregnant uterus, fell to a minimal value in the first quarter of the gestational period, and rose again to a plateau of 10.1 ml/kg/ min. beginning at midpregnancy. All these values appeared to remain unchanged during the last half of gestation.