Excess nutritional supply to the growing fetus, resulting from maternal diabetes and obesity, is associated with increased risks of fetal maldevelopment and adverse metabolic conditions in postnatal life. The placenta, in-terposed between mother and fetus, serves as the gateway between the two circulations and is usually considered to mediate maternal exposures to the fetus through a direct supply line. In this Perspective, however, we argue that the placenta is not an innocent bystander and mounts responses to fetal “signals of distress” to sustain its own adequate function and protect the fetus. We describe sev-eral types of protection that the placenta can offer the fetus against maternal metabolic perturbations and offer a theo-retical model of how the placenta responds to the intra-uterine environment in maternal diabetes and obesity to stabilize the fetal environment. Our approach supports growing calls for early screening and control of pregnancy metabolism to minimize harmful fetal outcomes.
CITATION STYLE
Desoye, G., & Wells, J. C. K. (2021). Pregnancies in Diabetes and Obesity: The Capacity-Load Model of Placental Adaptation. Diabetes, 70(4), 823–830. https://doi.org/10.2337/DB20-1111
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.