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NEXXUS NEWS

OBESE MUMS RISK BABY DEATH

14 April 2004

A research team from the University of Glasgow has been awarded nearly £129, 000 by the British Heart Foundation (BHF) to investigate the cause of pre-eclampsia (PE), a condition that kills nearly 600 babies in the UK each year. They believe it may be due to the excessive release of fatty acids and other potentially harmful chemicals from the obese mother's fat cells into her bloodstream. With obesity rates rising in the UK, the need to pinpoint the link with pre-eclampsia is becoming increasingly important.

PE affects the placenta, which supplies the baby with nutrients and oxygen from the mother's blood. There are no symptoms in the early stages of pregnancy and the condition is detectable only by antenatal checks on the mother's blood pressure and urine, although stunted growth in the baby can also indicate problems.

Lead researcher, Dr Naveed Sattar, says more research into the activity of fat cells in PE sufferers is needed to establish the causes of this problem, which effects around two to four in every hundred pregnancies. His team, based at University's Department of Vascular Biochemistry, will begin their three-year project this month by comparing blood plasma from PE patients with blood plasma from healthy pregnant women.

Dr Sattar believes factors in the plasma of PE patients may stimulate fat cells to release excessive amounts of fatty acids and other toxic products. Dr Sattar said: "Our study should offer new insight into the underlying causes of PE and may also pave the way for development of new treatments to prevent the condition. As PE is a major cause of disease and death for mothers and babies throughout the world, our research could generate real global benefits."

Professor Sir Charles George, Medical Director of the BHF, said: "Obesity is a well established risk factor for heart disease, but its link with diseases such as PE is less well understood. With obesity a growing menace in the UK, understanding how it causes such diseases is becoming increasingly important."

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