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    Effect of maternal iron restriction during pregnancy on renal morphology in the adult rat offspring

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    In rats, maternal anaemia during pregnancy causes hypertension in the adult offspring, although the mechanism is unknown. The present study investigated the renal morphology of adult rats born to mothers who were Fe-deficient during pregnancy. Rats were fed either a control (153 mg Fe/kg diet, n 7) or low-Fe (3 mg/kg diet, n 6) diet from 1 week before mating and throughout gestation. At delivery, the Fe-restricted (IR) mothers were anaemic; the IR pups were also anaemic and growth-retarded at 2 d of age. At 3 and 16 months, systolic blood pressure in the IR offspring (163 (SEM 4) and 151 (SEM 4) mmHg respectively, n 13) was greater than in control animals (145 (SEM 3) and 119 (SEM 4) mmHg respectively, n 15, P<0路05). At post mortem at 18 months, there was no difference in kidney weight between treatment groups, although relative kidney weight as a fraction of body weight in the IR offspring was greater than in control animals (P<0路05). Glomerular number was lower in the IR offspring (11路4 (SEM 1路1) per 4 mm2, n 13) compared with control rats (14路8 (SEM 0路7), n 15, P<0路05). Maternal treatment had no effect on glomerular size, but overall, female rats had smaller and more numerous glomeruli per unit area than male rats. When all animals were considered, inverse relationships were observed between glomerular number and glomerular size (r-0路73, n 28, P<0路05), and glomerular number and systolic blood pressure at both 3 months (r-0路42, n 28, P<0路05) and 16 months of age (r-0路64, n 28, P<0路05). Therefore, in rats, maternal Fe restriction causes hypertension in the adult offspring that may be due, in part, to a deficit in nephron number
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