Liver and brain iron deficiency in newborn infants with bilateral renal agenesis (Potter's syndrome)

Significant changes in fetal iron status potentially occur in pregnancies in which reduced fetal nutrient delivery is severe enough to result in intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR), particularly if chronic fetal hypoxia is also present and increases fetal iron demand for hemoglobin synthesis. Neo...

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Published inPediatric pathology & laboratory medicine Vol. 16; no. 3; p. 509
Main Authors Georgieff, M K, Petry, C D, Wobken, J D, Oyer, C E
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 1996
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Abstract Significant changes in fetal iron status potentially occur in pregnancies in which reduced fetal nutrient delivery is severe enough to result in intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR), particularly if chronic fetal hypoxia is also present and increases fetal iron demand for hemoglobin synthesis. Neonates rarely die following IUGR secondary to maternal preeclampsia, but bilateral renal agenesis, which is also characterized by reduced maternal-fetal blood flow, late gestation placental failure, and IUGR, is uniformly fatal. We measured neonatal liver iron concentration, as an assessment of fetal storage iron status, and heart and brain iron concentrations, as assessments of nonheme tissue iron status, in 11 infants who died in the neonatal period of bilateral renal agenesis, and compared them with values for gestational age-matched control infants whose gestation was not complicated by fetal growth retardation or hypoxia. Stainable nonheme iron in the hepatocytes was significantly reduced in all and completely absent in 8 of the 11 cases of renal agenesis (P < .001 compared with control). The mean +/- SEM liver iron concentration of the bilateral renal agenesis group (999 +/- 218 micrograms/g dry tissue weight) was 26% of the control value (3894 +/- 548 micrograms/g dry tissue weight; P < .001). Brain iron concentration was also lower in the group with bilateral renal agenesis (109 +/- 17 vs. 161 +/- 19; P = .015) and was correlated with liver iron concentration (r = .47; P = .03). Heart iron concentrations were similar in the two groups. Nine of the subjects with bilateral renal agenesis had placental weights below the fifth percentile for gestational age. The bilateral renal agenesis group had a lower mean birth weight (P < .001) and had a higher prevalence of fetal growth retardation (55% vs. 0%; P < .001). We conclude that infants with bilateral renal agenesis are at risk for severe iron deficiency of storage and nonstorage tissues. Liveborn infants with nonfatal fetal conditions characterized by significant restriction of maternal-fetal blood flow may also be at significant risk for postnatal iron deficiency.
AbstractList Significant changes in fetal iron status potentially occur in pregnancies in which reduced fetal nutrient delivery is severe enough to result in intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR), particularly if chronic fetal hypoxia is also present and increases fetal iron demand for hemoglobin synthesis. Neonates rarely die following IUGR secondary to maternal preeclampsia, but bilateral renal agenesis, which is also characterized by reduced maternal-fetal blood flow, late gestation placental failure, and IUGR, is uniformly fatal. We measured neonatal liver iron concentration, as an assessment of fetal storage iron status, and heart and brain iron concentrations, as assessments of nonheme tissue iron status, in 11 infants who died in the neonatal period of bilateral renal agenesis, and compared them with values for gestational age-matched control infants whose gestation was not complicated by fetal growth retardation or hypoxia. Stainable nonheme iron in the hepatocytes was significantly reduced in all and completely absent in 8 of the 11 cases of renal agenesis (P < .001 compared with control). The mean +/- SEM liver iron concentration of the bilateral renal agenesis group (999 +/- 218 micrograms/g dry tissue weight) was 26% of the control value (3894 +/- 548 micrograms/g dry tissue weight; P < .001). Brain iron concentration was also lower in the group with bilateral renal agenesis (109 +/- 17 vs. 161 +/- 19; P = .015) and was correlated with liver iron concentration (r = .47; P = .03). Heart iron concentrations were similar in the two groups. Nine of the subjects with bilateral renal agenesis had placental weights below the fifth percentile for gestational age. The bilateral renal agenesis group had a lower mean birth weight (P < .001) and had a higher prevalence of fetal growth retardation (55% vs. 0%; P < .001). We conclude that infants with bilateral renal agenesis are at risk for severe iron deficiency of storage and nonstorage tissues. Liveborn infants with nonfatal fetal conditions characterized by significant restriction of maternal-fetal blood flow may also be at significant risk for postnatal iron deficiency.
Author Oyer, C E
Petry, C D
Wobken, J D
Georgieff, M K
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Snippet Significant changes in fetal iron status potentially occur in pregnancies in which reduced fetal nutrient delivery is severe enough to result in intrauterine...
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StartPage 509
SubjectTerms Brain - metabolism
Brain - pathology
Fetal Growth Retardation - metabolism
Fetal Growth Retardation - pathology
Humans
Infant, Newborn
Iron - deficiency
Kidney - abnormalities
Liver - metabolism
Liver - pathology
Title Liver and brain iron deficiency in newborn infants with bilateral renal agenesis (Potter's syndrome)
URI https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9025849
Volume 16
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