The study was approved by the Wandsworth Research Ethics Committe

The study was approved by the Wandsworth Research Ethics Committee and was conducted

at St. George’s Hospital, London, UK. Written informed consent was obtained from all parents. We studied 13 dizygotic twin pairs born to healthy normotensive mothers and compared them with 115 consecutive singleton infants born also to healthy normotensive mothers. Dietary habits, smoking history and family history of diabetes, ischemic heart disease, stroke, hypercholesterolemia, and hypertension were obtained from both parents of the infants. The maternal characteristics were obtained on the day of capillaroscopy, that is, post pregnancy for all mothers. The hospital notes were also checked thoroughly to LEE011 ensure that all mothers were normotensive throughout pregnancy. We used orthogonal polarized spectroscopy to examine the skin capillary density at the plantar surface of the infant’s big toe as described previously [1, 14]. In brief, four microscopic fields, 0.62 mm2 each, were recorded continuously for 30 seconds using

the Cytoscan® Device (Cytometrics, Philadelphia, PA, USA), with 10× objective, final magnification 300×. Images were stored p53 inhibitor on a DVD recorder (Sony RDR-GX120, Tokyo, Japan) and capillaries were counted off line using the CapiScope computer software (KK-Technology, Exeter, UK). The number of all capillaries (i.e., with stagnant, intermittently flowing and continuously flowing red blood cells) Masitinib (AB1010) was counted

and double-checked by two investigators (PN and RDS) independently. BCD, which represents functional capillary density, was calculated as the mean of these four microscopic fields. We used venous congestion to maximize the number of visualized perfused skin capillaries [2] by applying a neonatal BP cuff around the calf muscles of the same leg. The cuff was then inflated and maintained at 30 mmHg for two minutes, and further images were recorded continuously for two minutes to determine MCD, which represents structural (anatomical) capillary density. Skin and room temperatures were monitored during the study using a YSI Tele-thermometer (YSI Inc., Dayton, OH, USA). All statistical analysis was performed using IBM SPSS 19 (IBM Corporation, Armonk, NY, USA). We used unpaired Student’s t-test to compare means of the groups and chi-square test to compare the non-parametric data. For capillaroscopy data, we used multiple generalized estimating equation model to compare the means between twins and singletons controlling for three potential confounders (gestational age, birth weight, and preterm birth) and accounting for the twins being non-independent observations. Scatterplots and Pearson correlation coefficient were used to describe the linear correlations between capillary density and birth weight. Statistical significance was declared when the p-value was <0.05.

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