[HTML][HTML] Reference intervals for plasma sulfate and urinary sulfate excretion in pregnancy

PA Dawson, S Petersen, R Rodwell, P Johnson… - BMC Pregnancy and …, 2015 - Springer
PA Dawson, S Petersen, R Rodwell, P Johnson, K Gibbons, A McWhinney, FG Bowling…
BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth, 2015Springer
Background Sulfate is important for fetal growth and development. During pregnancy, the
fetus relies on sulfate from the maternal circulation. We report reference intervals for
maternal plasma sulfate levels and fractional excretion index (FEI) for sulfate in pregnancy,
as well as sulfate levels in cord blood from term pregnancies. Methods Plasma and urine
were collected from 103 pregnant women of 10-20 weeks gestation and 106 pregnant
women of 30-37 weeks gestation. Venous cord plasma was collected from 80 healthy term …
Background
Sulfate is important for fetal growth and development. During pregnancy, the fetus relies on sulfate from the maternal circulation. We report reference intervals for maternal plasma sulfate levels and fractional excretion index (FEI) for sulfate in pregnancy, as well as sulfate levels in cord blood from term pregnancies.
Methods
Plasma and urine were collected from 103 pregnant women of 10-20 weeks gestation and 106 pregnant women of 30-37 weeks gestation. Venous cord plasma was collected from 80 healthy term babies. Sulfate levels were measured by ion chromatography. Plasma and urinary creatinine levels were used to calculate FEI sulfate in pregnant women. Analyses provide reference intervals, and explored the relationship between maternal sulfate data with several prenatal factors.
Results
Median maternal plasma sulfate levels were 452 μmol/L and 502 μmol/L at 10-20 and 30-37 weeks gestation, respectively, and inversely correlated with FEI sulfate median values of 0.15 and 0.11. Overall reference intervals were 305-710 and 335-701 μmol/L (2.5th; 97.5th percentile; for 10-20 and 30-37 weeks gestation, respectively) for maternal plasma sulfate, and 0.06-0.31 and 0.05-0.28 for maternal FEI sulfate. Term venous cord plasma sulfate median levels were significantly (p = 0.038) higher in female babies (375 μmol/L) when compared to male babies (342 μmol/L), with an overall reference interval of 175-603 μmol/L.
Conclusions
We provide the first reference intervals for maternal plasma sulfate levels and FEI sulfate, as well as cord plasma sulfate levels. These findings provide reference data for further studies of sulfate levels in both mother and child.
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