Placental insufficiency is one of the most common but least-discussed causes of HIE and cerebral palsy. Because it develops slowly over weeks rather than suddenly, its effects can be missed until they become severe. For families whose baby was born small, born early, or diagnosed with HIE despite what seemed like a normal pregnancy, placental insufficiency is often the quiet explanation that only appears in the placental pathology report. This guide explains what it is, how it differs from the acute sibling condition (placental abruption), the prenatal tests that should detect it, and when missed surveillance makes a resulting brain injury preventable.
What Placental Insufficiency Is
Placental insufficiency (also called uteroplacental insufficiency) is a chronic condition in which the placenta does not deliver enough oxygen and nutrients to the fetus. It usually originates in early pregnancy, when the spiral arteries of the mother’s uterus fail to remodel properly and the placenta develops with an under-supplied vascular bed. The consequences build gradually across the rest of the pregnancy:
- Intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR), meaning the baby grows below the 10th percentile for gestational age.
- Oligohydramnios, or reduced amniotic fluid volume, because fetal urine output falls when the baby’s kidney perfusion is reduced.
- Progressively abnormal umbilical artery Doppler findings as placental resistance rises.
- Chronic fetal hypoxia, which the fetus compensates for by redistributing blood to the brain and heart at the expense of other organs.
- Acute decompensation during labor if the already-stressed placenta cannot handle uterine contractions.
Placental Insufficiency vs. Placental Abruption
Placental insufficiency and placental abruption are often conflated but are distinct. Understanding the difference matters because the management and the case-review focus are different:
| Feature | Placental Insufficiency | Placental Abruption |
|---|---|---|
| Onset | Chronic, develops over weeks | Acute, minutes to hours |
| Common presentation | Slow fetal growth, abnormal Doppler, oligohydramnios | Sudden bleeding, abdominal pain, fetal distress |
| Detection | Serial ultrasound and Doppler surveillance | Clinical presentation and sometimes ultrasound |
| Mechanism of HIE | Chronic hypoxia plus labor stress | Acute interruption of oxygen supply |
| Time to injury | Weeks of gradual compromise | Minutes to irreversible injury |
| Primary management | Surveillance-guided timed delivery | Immediate emergency cesarean if severe |
Both conditions can produce HIE. In a case review, the records to focus on differ: for insufficiency, prenatal surveillance records; for abruption, labor records and decision-to-incision time.
How Placental Insufficiency Causes HIE
The baby does not become acutely oxygen-deprived in the same way as in an abruption. Instead, placental insufficiency produces a state of chronic marginal oxygen supply, and the fetus adapts by using compensatory mechanisms. Over time, however, these adaptations have limits:
- Blood flow is redistributed preferentially to the brain (the “brain-sparing effect”), leaving other organs relatively underperfused.
- Glycogen stores and fetal reserves become depleted.
- When labor begins and uterine contractions compress the uterine arteries periodically, a fetus with placental insufficiency has no reserve to tolerate the intermittent drops in oxygen delivery.
- Fetal heart rate tracing abnormalities develop quickly in labor, often progressing from reduced variability to late decelerations and then to bradycardia.
A 2016 review by Miller, Huppi, and Mallard in the Journal of Physiology documented that chronic placental insufficiency is associated with both gray matter and white matter brain injury, with specific effects on the hippocampus, cerebellum, and developing white matter tracts. The downstream outcomes include cerebral palsy, cognitive impairment, and learning disabilities.
The prenatal surveillance records often tell whether placental insufficiency was detected and acted on in time. Free case review.

How Placental Insufficiency Should Be Detected and Monitored
ACOG Practice Bulletin 234 (2021) outlines the standard approach. The entry points are routine prenatal care and risk stratification:
When Placental Insufficiency Becomes a Birth Injury Case
Placental insufficiency is not itself negligence. The care around it can be. A case may warrant review when the medical record shows one or more of the following:
- Failure to measure or document fundal height across multiple prenatal visits despite risk factors.
- Failure to order growth ultrasound when fundal height was persistently lagging.
- Failure to initiate umbilical artery Doppler surveillance in a pregnancy with confirmed IUGR.
- Failure to act on abnormal Doppler findings, particularly absent or reversed end-diastolic flow.
- Continuation of expectant management past evidence-based delivery thresholds.
- Inadequate intrapartum monitoring of a known-IUGR pregnancy in labor.
- Failure to evaluate the newborn for HIE after a growth-restricted delivery with a compromised baby.
- Failure to initiate therapeutic hypothermia within 6 hours when the baby met criteria.
A thorough case review examines the full prenatal record (fundal height measurements, growth scans, Doppler studies, BPPs, NSTs), the labor and delivery record (fetal monitoring strips, mode of delivery, cord gases, Apgar scores), and the neonatal course (resuscitation, cooling, MRI, neurological exam). The placental pathology report is often especially informative, because it can document chronic villous pathology that confirms long-standing insufficiency.
What the placental pathology report can tell you
Most hospitals send placentas to pathology when a baby is admitted to the NICU, and the resulting report is one of the most valuable but under-read documents in HIE cases. In placental insufficiency, the pathology often shows maternal vascular malperfusion (a pattern including placental infarcts, accelerated villous maturation, distal villous hypoplasia, and decidual vasculopathy). These findings confirm that the placenta was structurally abnormal for weeks or months, not that a sudden labor event caused the injury. The pattern can help distinguish chronic hypoxia from acute intrapartum asphyxia, which matters both medically (for predicting outcomes) and legally (for identifying when warning signs should have been detected). Always request a copy of the placental pathology report.
What to gather before a case review
If you are preparing to have a placental insufficiency-related HIE outcome reviewed, the relevant documents span the whole pregnancy:
- All prenatal visit notes, including every fundal height measurement and any concerns noted.
- Every growth ultrasound with estimated fetal weight and percentile.
- All umbilical artery Doppler studies, biophysical profiles, and non-stress tests.
- The labor and delivery record, including the fetal heart rate tracing and mode of delivery.
- Cord blood gases (arterial and venous) and the neonatal resuscitation record.
- The placental pathology report, as above.
- The NICU admission note, daily notes, and discharge summary, plus any MRI or EEG reports.
Absent or reversed end-diastolic flow is a well-recognized signal to deliver. When it was documented but not acted on, that is the center of a birth injury case.




Related reading for parents
- Preeclampsia and HIE: the connection every expecting mother should understand
- Cord blood gas results explained: pH, base deficit, and what they mean for HIE
- Who qualifies for therapeutic cooling? HIE eligibility criteria explained
- Neonatal encephalopathy vs HIE: understanding the terminology doctors use
- Chorioamnionitis and HIE: how infection in the womb causes newborn brain injury
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