Histological changes in the placenta and vascularization of its villi in early-And lateonset Preeclampsia

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Abstract

Objective: To make a comparative histological study of the placenta and a morphometric analysis of its terminal villi in early-And late-onset preeclampsia. Material and methods. Placentae from patients whose pregnancy had been complicated by the development of early- (n=26) or late-onset (n=84) preeclampsia were examined. A control group comprised placentae from 28 patients with physiological pregnancy and no extragenital diseases. The authors made a comparative histological study of placental tissue and a morphometric analysis of the terminal villi using the sections immunohistochemically stained for CD31. Results. It was determined that there was a preponderance of branching angiogenesis in the preeclamptic chorionic villi and an increase in the number of syncytial nodules and microcysts in the septae in late-onset preeclampsia. Morphometric analysis of immunohistochemical placental specimens established a reduction in the sizes and vascularization indicators of terminal villi that determine the development of placental hypoxia and are more pronounced in cases of early-onset preeclampsia.

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Shchegolev, A. I., Lyapin, V. M., Tumanova, U. N., Vodneva, D. N., & Shmakov, R. G. (2016). Histological changes in the placenta and vascularization of its villi in early-And lateonset Preeclampsia. Arkhiv Patologii, 78(1), 13–18. https://doi.org/10.17116/patol201678113-18

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