Copper deficiency in pregnancy: effect on maternal and fetal polyol metabolites.
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The present study was undertaken to determine whether the mortality of the fetus and the neonate of copper-deficient rats consuming fructose during pregnancy is associated with an aberration in carbohydrate metabolism. A total of 84 Sprague-Dawley rats were fed a copper-deficient or a copper-adequate diet containing fructose or starch for 19 or 21 days after conception. The consumption of a fructose-based diet during pregnancy resulted in higher concentrations of maternal blood fructose, sorbitol, triglyceride, and uric acid when compared with a starch diet. The placenta contained more than 10-fold the concentration of glucose and more than double the concentrations of fructose, triglycerides, and sorbitol when fructose was the dietary carbohydrate compared with starch. The livers of fetuses belonging to the fructose dietary group exhibited high concentrations of glucose and sorbitol. In addition, fetal blood contained higher concentrations of glucose, fructose, sorbitol, and triglycerides than the corresponding values from the starch dietary group. The consumption of a copper-deficient diet containing fructose during pregnancy resulted in massive subcutaneous hemorrhages of the fetus. In contrast, this pathology was rare in other dietary groups. The combination of copper deficiency with fructose feeding resulted in more than double the concentration of sorbitol in fetal liver, and higher concentrations of insulin and dopamine of fetal blood compared with the consumption of a copper-deficient diet containing starch.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)