Fetal inflammatory response and brain injury in the preterm newborn

S Malaeb, O Dammann - Journal of child neurology, 2009 - journals.sagepub.com
S Malaeb, O Dammann
Journal of child neurology, 2009journals.sagepub.com
Preterm birth can be caused by intrauterine infection and maternal/fetal inflammatory
responses. Maternal inflammation (chorioamnionitis) is often followed by a systemic fetal
inflammatory response characterized by elevated levels of proinflammatory cytokines in the
fetal circulation. The inflammation signal is likely transmitted across the blood-brain barrier
and initiates a neuroinflammatory response. Microglial activation has a central role in this
process and triggers excitotoxic, inflammatory, and oxidative damage in the developing …
Preterm birth can be caused by intrauterine infection and maternal/fetal inflammatory responses. Maternal inflammation (chorioamnionitis) is often followed by a systemic fetal inflammatory response characterized by elevated levels of proinflammatory cytokines in the fetal circulation. The inflammation signal is likely transmitted across the blood-brain barrier and initiates a neuroinflammatory response. Microglial activation has a central role in this process and triggers excitotoxic, inflammatory, and oxidative damage in the developing brain. Neuroinflammation can persist over a period of time and sensitize the brain to subinjurious insults in early and chronic phases but may offer relative tolerance in the intermediate period through activation of endogenous anti-inflammatory, protective, and repair mechanisms. Neuroinflammatory injury not only destroys what exists but also changes what develops.
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