Zobrazeno 1 - 7
of 7
pro vyhledávání: '"Tatiana, Torricos"'
Autor:
Stacy Zamudio, Tatiana Torricos, Ewa Fik, Maria Oyala, Lourdes Echalar, Janet Pullockaran, Emily Tutino, Brittney Martin, Sonia Belliappa, Elfride Balanza, Nicholas P Illsley
Publikováno v:
PLoS ONE, Vol 5, Iss 1, p e8551 (2010)
The most well known reproductive consequence of residence at high altitude (HA >2700 m) is reduction in fetal growth. Reduced fetoplacental oxygenation is an underlying cause of pregnancy pathologies, including intrauterine growth restriction and pre
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/dc14bd284d754b368743b0b99e2e7cea
Autor:
Enrique Vargas, Caitlin Dolan, Tatiana Torricos, Elfride Balanza, Wilma Tellez, Michael Brimacombe, Gladys Heredia, Lourdes Echalar, Nicholas P. Illsley, Ivan Maldonado, Lucrecia Postigo, Stacy Zamudio
Publikováno v:
The Journal of Physiology. 587:693-708
Fetal growth is decreased at high altitude (> 2700 m). We hypothesized that variation in fetal O2 delivery might account for both the altitude effect and the relative preservation of fetal growth in multigenerational natives to high altitude. Partici
Autor:
Gladys Heredia, Tatiana Alvarez, Lourdes Echalar, Elfride Balanza, Tatiana Torricos, Ivan Maldonado, Nicholas P. Illsley, Carmelo Rodriguez, Julio Ameller, Wilma Tellez, Stacy Zamudio, Lucrecia Postigo, Enrique Vargas, Michael Brimacombe
Publikováno v:
The Journal of Physiology. 582:883-895
Fetal growth is reduced at high altitude, but the decrease is less among long-resident populations. We hypothesized that greater maternal uteroplacental O2 delivery would explain increased fetal growth in Andean natives versus European migrants to hi
Autor:
Tatiana Torricos, Olga A. Kovalenko, A. Al-Khan, Lourdes Echalar, Manuel Jesús Parodi Álvarez, N.P. Illsley, Stacy Zamudio
Pregnancy complications such as preeclampsia (PE) and intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) are associated with reduced blood flow, contributing to placental and fetal hypoxia. Placental hypoxia is thought to cause altered production of angiogenic g
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::c0368800f20ec379a9b3a49024b524ec
https://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6472272/
https://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6472272/
Autor:
Tatiana Torricos, Janet Pullockaran, Stacy Zamudio, Emily Tutino, Elfride Balanza, Ewa Fik, Sonia Belliappa, Maria Oyala, Brittney Martin, Lourdes Echalar, Nicholas P. Illsley
Publikováno v:
PLoS ONE, Vol 5, Iss 1, p e8551 (2010)
PLoS ONE
PLoS ONE
Background The most well known reproductive consequence of residence at high altitude (HA >2700 m) is reduction in fetal growth. Reduced fetoplacental oxygenation is an underlying cause of pregnancy pathologies, including intrauterine growth restrict
Autor:
Lucrecia, Postigo, Gladys, Heredia, Nicholas P, Illsley, Tatiana, Torricos, Caitlin, Dolan, Lourdes, Echalar, Wilma, Tellez, Ivan, Maldonado, Michael, Brimacombe, Elfride, Balanza, Enrique, Vargas, Stacy, Zamudio
Publikováno v:
The Journal of physiology. 587(3)
Fetal growth is decreased at high altitude (2700 m). We hypothesized that variation in fetal O(2) delivery might account for both the altitude effect and the relative preservation of fetal growth in multigenerational natives to high altitude. Partici
Autor:
Stacy, Zamudio, Lucrecia, Postigo, Nicholas P, Illsley, Carmelo, Rodriguez, Gladys, Heredia, Michael, Brimacombe, Lourdes, Echalar, Tatiana, Torricos, Wilma, Tellez, Ivan, Maldonado, Elfride, Balanza, Tatiana, Alvarez, Julio, Ameller, Enrique, Vargas
Publikováno v:
The Journal of physiology. 582(Pt 2)
Fetal growth is reduced at high altitude, but the decrease is less among long-resident populations. We hypothesized that greater maternal uteroplacental O(2) delivery would explain increased fetal growth in Andean natives versus European migrants to