Perinatal complications and maximising lamb survival in an adolescent paradigm characterised by premature delivery and low birthweight.

The competition for nutrients in overnourished and still-growing adolescent sheep negatively impacts gestation length, colostrum supply and lamb birthweight, all of which may affect neonatal morbidity and survival to weaning. Herein perinatal complications and the requirement for supplementary feedi...

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Autores principales: Jacqueline M Wallace, Paul O Shepherd, John S Milne, Raymond P Aitken
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Publicado: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/e111d598109b4b2496996c54a5a0a635
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:e111d598109b4b2496996c54a5a0a6352021-12-02T20:13:09ZPerinatal complications and maximising lamb survival in an adolescent paradigm characterised by premature delivery and low birthweight.1932-620310.1371/journal.pone.0259890https://doaj.org/article/e111d598109b4b2496996c54a5a0a6352021-01-01T00:00:00Zhttps://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0259890https://doaj.org/toc/1932-6203The competition for nutrients in overnourished and still-growing adolescent sheep negatively impacts gestation length, colostrum supply and lamb birthweight, all of which may affect neonatal morbidity and survival to weaning. Herein perinatal complications and the requirement for supplementary feeding were analysed in relation to gestational-intake, and the degree of premature delivery and prenatal growth-restriction exhibited. Pregnancies were established by embryo transfer and the mean/standard deviation (SD) gestation length and birthweight of the optimally-fed control group (n = 100) was used to define early delivery and reduced birthweight categories (1.5 and 3.0 SDs below the control mean for each aspect). Control lambs were largely delivered at term (94%), and had a normal birthweight (92%), while very preterm (≤139days, 18.5%) and preterm delivery (140-142days, 54.8%), extremely low birthweight (ELBW; females ≤2838g and males ≤3216g, 21.1%) and low birthweight (LBW; females 2839 to ≤4001g and males 3217 to ≤4372g, 32.2%), were common in the overnourished group (n = 270, P<0.001). Accordingly, overnourished dams were more likely to lamb without assistance while the incidence of major dystocia was greater in controls. Initial lamb vigour at birth was independent of gestational-intake, delivery or birthweight category but both ELBW and very premature lambs required more assistance with feeding in the first 24h postnatal, primarily reflecting low colostrum availability. Indeed, relative to normal, ELBW lambs had a greater risk of experiencing mismothering, and enhanced likelihood of requiring supplementary feeding throughout the neonatal period (P<0.001). ELBW lambs also had a greater possibility of respiratory issues at birth (P<0.01) and renal complications (P<0.001), while very preterm delivery was associated with an increased risk of gastrointestinal tract problems (P<0.01). In spite of these complications, all-cause mortality was low (5.4%) suggesting that our proactive neonatal care regime can overcome many of the issues associated with extreme prematurity and low birthweight.Jacqueline M WallacePaul O ShepherdJohn S MilneRaymond P AitkenPublic Library of Science (PLoS)articleMedicineRScienceQENPLoS ONE, Vol 16, Iss 11, p e0259890 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Medicine
R
Science
Q
spellingShingle Medicine
R
Science
Q
Jacqueline M Wallace
Paul O Shepherd
John S Milne
Raymond P Aitken
Perinatal complications and maximising lamb survival in an adolescent paradigm characterised by premature delivery and low birthweight.
description The competition for nutrients in overnourished and still-growing adolescent sheep negatively impacts gestation length, colostrum supply and lamb birthweight, all of which may affect neonatal morbidity and survival to weaning. Herein perinatal complications and the requirement for supplementary feeding were analysed in relation to gestational-intake, and the degree of premature delivery and prenatal growth-restriction exhibited. Pregnancies were established by embryo transfer and the mean/standard deviation (SD) gestation length and birthweight of the optimally-fed control group (n = 100) was used to define early delivery and reduced birthweight categories (1.5 and 3.0 SDs below the control mean for each aspect). Control lambs were largely delivered at term (94%), and had a normal birthweight (92%), while very preterm (≤139days, 18.5%) and preterm delivery (140-142days, 54.8%), extremely low birthweight (ELBW; females ≤2838g and males ≤3216g, 21.1%) and low birthweight (LBW; females 2839 to ≤4001g and males 3217 to ≤4372g, 32.2%), were common in the overnourished group (n = 270, P<0.001). Accordingly, overnourished dams were more likely to lamb without assistance while the incidence of major dystocia was greater in controls. Initial lamb vigour at birth was independent of gestational-intake, delivery or birthweight category but both ELBW and very premature lambs required more assistance with feeding in the first 24h postnatal, primarily reflecting low colostrum availability. Indeed, relative to normal, ELBW lambs had a greater risk of experiencing mismothering, and enhanced likelihood of requiring supplementary feeding throughout the neonatal period (P<0.001). ELBW lambs also had a greater possibility of respiratory issues at birth (P<0.01) and renal complications (P<0.001), while very preterm delivery was associated with an increased risk of gastrointestinal tract problems (P<0.01). In spite of these complications, all-cause mortality was low (5.4%) suggesting that our proactive neonatal care regime can overcome many of the issues associated with extreme prematurity and low birthweight.
format article
author Jacqueline M Wallace
Paul O Shepherd
John S Milne
Raymond P Aitken
author_facet Jacqueline M Wallace
Paul O Shepherd
John S Milne
Raymond P Aitken
author_sort Jacqueline M Wallace
title Perinatal complications and maximising lamb survival in an adolescent paradigm characterised by premature delivery and low birthweight.
title_short Perinatal complications and maximising lamb survival in an adolescent paradigm characterised by premature delivery and low birthweight.
title_full Perinatal complications and maximising lamb survival in an adolescent paradigm characterised by premature delivery and low birthweight.
title_fullStr Perinatal complications and maximising lamb survival in an adolescent paradigm characterised by premature delivery and low birthweight.
title_full_unstemmed Perinatal complications and maximising lamb survival in an adolescent paradigm characterised by premature delivery and low birthweight.
title_sort perinatal complications and maximising lamb survival in an adolescent paradigm characterised by premature delivery and low birthweight.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/e111d598109b4b2496996c54a5a0a635
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AT pauloshepherd perinatalcomplicationsandmaximisinglambsurvivalinanadolescentparadigmcharacterisedbyprematuredeliveryandlowbirthweight
AT johnsmilne perinatalcomplicationsandmaximisinglambsurvivalinanadolescentparadigmcharacterisedbyprematuredeliveryandlowbirthweight
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