Objective: Intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) is a common complication of pregnancy. There are many possible aetiologic factors of maternal, placental and/or fetal origin. Often there is no known explanation. The aim of this study was to investigate whether a reduction in maternal energy substrate production could be one of the factors involved in IUGR.
Design: Measurement of maternal energy substrate production and glucoregulatory hormones in women with growth-restricted fetuses.
Settings: University Hospital, Uppsala, Sweden.
Population: Ten healthy pregnant women with IUGR were compared with eight recently reported healthy women with normal pregnancies. The women were studied at 35.4+/-1.6 weeks of gestation after an overnight fast.
Methods: Rates of glycerol and glucose production were analysed by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry following constant-rate infusion of [1,1,2,3,3-(2)H5]glycerol and [6,6-(2)H2]glucose.
Main outcome measure: Third trimester glycerol and glucose production.
Results: Glycerol production, reflecting lipolysis, was lower in the women with IUGR than in those with normal pregnancies, 2.36+/-0.58 versus 3.06+/-0.66 micromol kg-1 minute-1 (P=0.033), whereas there was no difference in rate of glucose production (glucose production rate [GPR]), 12.1+/-1.5 versus 13.2+/-1.5 micromol kg-1 minute-1 (P=0.23). Plasma glycerol levels were increased in the women with IUGR (P=0.008).
Conclusions: Lipolysis is lower in pregnancies complicated by IUGR as compared with normal pregnancies. Increased lipolysis during pregnancy provides substrate for maternal energy metabolism, which spares glucose for the fetus. A reduced maternal production of energy substrate could be one of several factors underlying IUGR. A lack of relationship between insulin levels and either lipolysis or GPR suggests defective regulation of energy substrate production in this group of pregnant women.