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Relationship between Partial Uterine Cervical Tissue Excision and Preterm Birth: An Experimental Animal Study

Authors
Ahn, Ki HoonJeong, Hyun ChulKim, Hee-younKang, DahyunHong, Soon-CheolCho, Geum JoonOh, Min-JeongKim, Hai-Joong
Issue Date
Sep-2017
Publisher
THIEME MEDICAL PUBL INC
Keywords
uterine cervix; excision; infection; preterm birth; mouse model
Citation
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PERINATOLOGY, v.34, no.11, pp.1072 - 1077
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PERINATOLOGY
Volume
34
Number
11
Start Page
1072
End Page
1077
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/82488
DOI
10.1055/s-0037-1603816
ISSN
0735-1631
Abstract
Objective To investigate whether the uterine cervix excision is associated with preterm birth in female mice. Study Design Sexually mature female C57BL/6 mice ( n =40) were randomly divided into four groups (A, sham; B, cervical excision; C, lipopolysaccharide, 100 mu g intrauterine injection; and D, cervical excision+lipopolysaccharide injection), with 10 mice per group. Three weeks after cervical excision, timed mating was performed. On gestational day 16, lipopolysaccharide was injected between the first and second horns of the right uterus near the cervix. The uterine cervix was obtained after delivery and was histologically analyzed. Results The mean gestational period in group D was significantly lower than those in the other groups (17, 19.5, 19, and 18.2 days in groups D, A, B, and C, respectively; p =0.034). The cervical length was shorter in the cervical excision groups ( p =0.004). The muscle-to-collagen ratio in the proximal cervix was higher in group D ( p =0.037). Conclusion Prepregnancy cervical excision and subsequent lipopolysaccharide injection showed a high rate of preterm birth, which was higher than the known lipopolysaccharide injection related preterm birth rate. Prepregnancy cervical excision appears to have additive effects with inflammation in inducing preterm birth, which are associated with the relative muscular component amount.
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