Objective: The purpose of this study was to investigate the fetal catecholamine and arterial blood gas responses to ultrasonographically guided percutaneous needle aspiration of blood from a fetal cardiac ventricle.
Study design: A crossover trial design was used. Nine pregnant sheep of 120 to 130 days' gestation were stratified to either percutaneous fetal blood sampling or a sham experiment performed on the first day, and the alternative study on the following day. Arterial blood samples were withdrawn from chronically implanted catheters.
Results: Percutaneous fetal blood sampling caused small but statistically significant increases in mean plasma epinephrine and norepinephrine levels 5 seconds after the procedure. Levels thereafter were similar to baseline values. Arterial pH and PCO2 values were unaltered except in one fetus, where blood sampling was followed by bradycardia with acidosis and elevated catecholamine levels.
Conclusions: Ultrasonographically guided percutaneous fetal blood sampling from a cardiac ventricle in sheep produces a rise in catecholamine levels that return to baseline values within 5 minutes. This technique provides an alternative to chronic catheterization for some experiments in which blood sampling or drug injection is required. The results also indicate that needle insertion produces only a modest and transient stress response in the fetus.