Chronic polyhydramnios is a syndrome with a lactogen receptor defect in the chorion laeve.
Human chorion laeve contains a lactogenic hormone [prolactin (PRL), growth hormone (GH) and placental lactogen ( hPL)] receptor. Here, we studied binding of the potent lactogen, human GH, to this receptor in 18 normal pregnant women, in 12 patients whose pregnancies were complicated by chronic polyhydramnios and in 13 with chronic oligohydramnios. Polyhydramnios was classified clinically as idiopathic in seven patients, and secondary and associated with various disorders in the remaining five patients. Lactogenic hormone binding was lower in association with polyhydramnios (mean 1.60, SEM 0.15%) than with normal amniotic fluid volume (mean 3.05, SEM 0.40%; P less than 0.05); Scatchard analysis indicated that a reduced number of lactogen receptors within the chorion laeve was the reason. The lactogenic hormone receptor defect in the chorion laeve was present in pregnancies complicated by either idiopathic or secondary polyhydramnios. In contrast to chronic polyhydramnios, tissue from patients with chronic oligohydramnios bound lactogenic ligands in a normal fashion. Insulin binding sites were also identified in the chorion laeve, and, in contrast to the lactogens, binding parameters were equivalent in the three patient groups. PRL resistance developing subsequent to this chorion laeve receptor defect might produce the excessive amniotic fluid volume characteristic of polyhydramnios. We propose that a chorionic PRL receptor deficiency underlies the various clinical forms of chronic polyhydramnios.[1]References
- Chronic polyhydramnios is a syndrome with a lactogen receptor defect in the chorion laeve. Healy, D.L., Herington, A.C., O'Herlihy, C. British journal of obstetrics and gynaecology. (1985) [Pubmed]
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