Project Details
Description
DESCRIPTION (Adapted from the Investigator's Abstract): Pregnancy-induced
hypertension and preeclampsia remain leading causes of fetal and maternal
morbidity and mortality, occurring in as many as 10% of pregnancies in the
United States. They are a particular problem in first and adolescent
pregnancies. The proposed study will investigate relationships during
pregnancy among five factors: blood pressure, temporal changes in blood
lead, dietary calcium intake, current lead ingestion, and bone lead
mobilization. Rats will be exposed to lead prior to pregnancy, during
pregnancy, or at both times, and will be fed a diet containing a low or
normal concentration of calcium during pregnancy. Control groups of
pregnant rats will not be exposed to lead and non-pregnant animals will also
be studied. Variables to be measured include systolic blood pressure, blood
and bone lead concentrations, and serum concentrations of parathormone,
osteocalcin, and 25 and 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D. The study will allow
determination of whether the natural rise in blood lead late in pregnancy
contributes to pregnancy-induced hypertension. It will also permit
assessment of the relative effects of current lead exposure versus bone lead
mobilization on blood lead and blood pressure during pregnancy. These
studies will focus on quantifying blood lead/blood pressure relationships in
the rat and investigation of factors that may influence this relationship
during pregnancy. The concept that calcium supplementation is beneficial
during pregnancy is not new. However, the proposed studies utilize lead
exposure as a way to study if the mechanism of prevention of increases in
blood pressure by dietary calcium during pregnancy is by suppression of lead
absorption from the diet and/or suppression of bone lead mobilization.
Thus, these studies may explain the variability of the results of other
investigations that have assessed the independent effects of calcium and
lead on blood pressure during pregnancy.
Status | Finished |
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Effective start/end date | 8/15/97 → 7/31/01 |
Funding
- National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
ASJC
- Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health
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