Role of intrapartum hypoxia in carnitine nutritional status during the early neonatal period.
Keywords
Abstract
We analyze markers of carnitine insufficiency and deficiency, lysine (LYS) and methionine (MET), in 39 neonates with intrapartum hypoxia (selection criteria: umbilical artery pH <7.20, lactate >1.8 mmol/l and PaO2 <25 mm Hg), and in 35 healthy newborn infants (control group) in the early neonatal period (1-7 days of life). Free (FC), total (TC) carnitine and acylcarnitines (AC=short-chain+long-chain acylcarnitines) were measured using a radioisotopic micromethod; LYS and MET were determined by high-pressure liquid chromatography. AC and TC plasma concentrations and AC/FC ratio were higher while FC/TC ratio was lower in the hypoxic neonates than in the control group. Hypoxic newborn infants (59%) presented "carnitine deficiency" (FC/TC <0.7) and 60% of them "carnitine insufficiency" (AC/FC ratio >0.4) vs. 31% and 28%, respectively, for the neonates of the control group (p<0.05). In the healthy neonates group, MET correlated with FC/TC and the AC/FC ratio. FC, TC, AC, AC/FC and umbilical artery pH (pHua) were inversely correlated. FC/TC and MET correlated with pHua. We conclude that: (1) an important percentage of newborn infants with intrapartum hypoxia suffer carnitine deficiency and carnitine insufficiency in the early neonatal period, related to MET plasma levels; (2) the carnitine deficiency or insufficiency in the neonate is determined by the degree of intrapartum acidosis.