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Abstract
There are known sex specific differences in fetal and neonatal morbidity and mortality.
There are also known differences in birthweight centile with males generally being
larger than females at birth. These differences are generally ignored when studying
obstetric complications of pregnancy and the mechanisms that confer these differences
between the sexes are unknown. Current evidence suggests sex specific adaptation of
the placenta may be central to the differences in fetal growth and survival. Our research
examining pregnancies complicated by asthma has reported sexually dimorphic differences
in fetal growth and survival with males adapting placental function to allow for continued
growth in an adverse maternal environment while females reduce growth in an attempt
to survive further maternal insults. We have reported sex differences in placental
cytokine expression, insulin-like growth factor pathways and the placental response
to cortisol in relation to the complication of asthma during pregnancy. More recently
we have identified sex specific alterations in placental function in pregnancies complicated
by preterm delivery which were associated with neonatal outcome and survival. We propose
the sexually dimorphic differences in growth and survival of the fetus are mediated
by the sex specific function of the human placenta. This review will present evidence
supporting this hypothesis and will argue that to ignore the sex of the placenta is
no longer sound scientific practice.
Crown Copyright 2010. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.