Abstract
Maternal psychological stress may lead to adverse pregnancy outcome in Rhesus monkey. Chronic anxiety caused an increased stillbirth rate, fetal growth retardation and altered placental morphology. On another time scale, lightening of maternal anesthesia during surgery produced an impaired fetal oxygenation while reinstitution of anesthesia ameliorated the fetal asphyxia. For the 1st time, a relationship between specific episodes of maternal psychological stress and exacerbation of fetal asphyxia in utero was demonstrated. Eight term pregnant Rhesus monkeys were anesthetized with sodium pentobarbital. Catheters were placed both into the maternal and the fetal femoral arteries for the continuous recording of blood pressure and heart rate and for the intermittent campling of maternal and fetal blood. An open-ended catheter recorded intrauterine pressures. Following a complete repair, the anesthesia of the mothers was allowed to lighten. As the mothers awakened, the fetuses invariably showed the development of fetal asphyxia. A fetal acidosis developed and the fetal oxygenation and repair of acidosis. Studies while the mothers were fully awake showed the repeated and regular development of episodes of heightened fetal asphyxia produced by episodes of stressful stimulation of the mothers. Episodes of maternal psychological stress led to changes in both fetal vital signs and blood chemical findings. These alterations in fetal state regularly followed the onset of the episodes of psychological stress by 50 s. These changes also usually remitted 50 s following the termination of the periods of stress. These results demonstrated a direct and unequivocal relationship between maternal psychological stress and fetal asphyxia. The maternal stress apparently produced impairments in the circulation to the uterus through an increased sympathetic nervous system activity and a shunting of the maternal blood-flow from the abdominal vis cera to other organs as occurs in the fight-or-flight reaction.

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