American Journal of Perinatology Reports (Jan 2020)
Unique Clinical and Histological Features of Placental Mesenchymal Dysplasia Complicated by Severe Preeclampsia in the Midtrimester
Abstract
Detailed clinical and pathological features of placental mesenchymal dysplasia (PMD) complicated by preeclampsia (PE) are unknown. A 39-year-old nulliparous woman was referred at 19 weeks gestation. Ultrasound examination identified a fetus with severe growth restriction (−2.8 SD) and a markedly thickened placenta with many cystic structures suggestive of PMD. At 21 weeks, the patient developed severe hypertension (180/95 mm Hg) with marked proteinuria and an elevated serum soluble fms-like tyrosine-kinase-1 (sFlt-1) level (47,000 pg/L). The pregnancy was terminated to protect maternal health. Placental weight was 450 g and no histopathological findings of either proliferation or dysplasia were observed in the trophoblast. Villous chromosome examination revealed a 46XX karyotype, consistent with the diagnosis of PMD. In addition to the pathological findings of vascular endothelial dysfunction characteristic of the placenta in PE cases, enhanced expression of sFlt-1 in the syncytiotrophoblast of the enlarged villi was confirmed by immunohistochemistry as a novel finding in this condition. Monitoring of the serum sFlt-1 value is suggested to be a useful predictor of the pathological change associated with extremely early severe PE in PMD cases.
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