A hormone produced by the fetus could explain nausea during pregnancy

2023-12-19 02:17:31

A hormone produced by the fetus is believed to be the cause of the nausea and vomiting that many women experience during pregnancy, a major discovery that might pave the way for treatments.

Up to 7 in 10 pregnancies are associated with nausea and vomiting. In some women — between 1 and 3 out of 100 pregnancies — these symptoms can be serious. This is called “hyperemesis gravidarum,” and it is the most common cause of hospital admission among women during the first three months of pregnancy.

Kate Middleton, the wife of Prince William, suffered from it in particular during her three pregnancies.

According to the results of a study involving scientists from the University of Cambridge and researchers from Scotland, the United States and Sri Lanka, published recently in the journal Naturethese ailments – serious or not – are due to a hormone produced by the fetus, a protein known as GDF15.

To arrive at this discovery, the researchers studied data from women recruited in a number of studies and used a combination of approaches: measuring hormones in the blood of pregnant women, studies on cells and mice, etc.

They showed that the degree of nausea and vomiting a woman experiences during pregnancy is directly related to both the amount of GDF15 produced by the fetal part of the placenta and sent into her bloodstream and her sensitivity to effect of this hormone.

Notably, the team discovered that some women have a much higher genetic risk of hyperemesis gravidarum, associated with lower levels of the hormone in the blood and tissues outside of pregnancy.

Similarly, women with an inherited blood disorder, beta thalassemia, which causes them to have naturally very high levels of GDF15 before pregnancy, experience little or no nausea or vomiting. .

“The baby growing in the womb produces a hormone at levels the mother is not used to. The more sensitive she is to this hormone, the sicker she will be,” summarized Professor Stephen O’Rahilly, co-director of the Institute of Metabolic Sciences at the Wellcome Medical Research Center at the University of Cambridge, one of the authors of the study.

“Knowing this gives us a clue as to how we might prevent the phenomenon,” he continued.

Co-author Marlena Fejzo of the University of Southern California, whose team previously identified the genetic association between GDF15 and hyperemesis gravidarum, suffered from the disease herself: “When I was pregnant , I might barely move without being sick, she said. I hope that now that we understand the cause, we are closer to developing effective treatments. »

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