Although there is a strong rationale to supplement gravid patients suffering intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) or preeclampsia with Arginine or other nitric oxide donors, evidence in the literature has been inconclusive. The current study was designed to determine whether oral treatment with L-Arginine, a nitric oxide (NO) donor, would enhance birth weight and/or decrease neonatal morbidity in pregnancies with severe vascular intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR).
Patients and Methods: 44 patients with a singleton pregnancy who had been referred for IUGR detected by ultrasonic examination were included. Vascular IUGR was defined by fetal abdominal circumference less than or equal to the third percentile, associated with abnormal uterine Doppler. After double blind randomization, patients received either 14 g/day of L-arginine (90 mL syrup, Veyron France Laboratories), or a placebo. Doppler ultrasound examination of the uterine, umbilical and cerebral circulation, and of ductus venosus was performed prior to inclusion, after 7 days of treatment, and the day before delivery. Ultrasound examination was performed upon randomization, and weekly until birth. Venous blood and urine samples were collected before initiation and after 7 days of treatment, and both maternal and umbilical venous samples were obtained at delivery for nitrate and nitrite (NO2-/ NO3-) determination.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
44
Chu-Nantes
Nantes, France
The principal outcome is birth weight at delivery and neonatal morbidity (Crib Score)
Time frame: 6 weeks
Secondary outcomes are Maternal and fetal hemodynamic with blood pressure and dopplers upon inclusion, after 7 days of treatment and at delivery
Time frame: 6 weeks
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