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The placental bed vascular pathology revisited: a risk indicator for cardiovascular disease.

AIM: The present paper intends in the first place to clarify the confusing terminology for describing the vascular pathology of the placental bed in relation to long-term risk of cardiovascular disease.

METHODS: Systematic review of relevant topics.

RESULTS: The maternal blood supply to the placenta is achieved by some 100 utero-placental spiral arteries with an outside diameter varying between 200 and 600 microns. Defective physiological changes of the myometrial segment of utero-placental spiral arteries and, particularly in preeclampsia associated to hypertensive disease, the presence of atherosclerosis in their proximal segment are a cause of obstructive vascular pathology. On the other hand, basal arteries which supply the inner myometrium and basal decidua are not affected by physiological change and maintain their musculoelastic structure. They can be identified by their external diameter of less than 120 microns. Acute atherosis is an aspecific vascular lesion that occurs in basal as well as spiral arteries inside, as well as outside, the placental bed in association with a variety of obstetrical conditions.

CONCLUSIONS: An increased risk of future cardiovascular disease, should be linked to atherosis or, at a later stage, atherosclerosis of utero-placental spiral arteries, rather than to that of decidual basal arteries.

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