1. Neurological disease in pregnancy.
- Author
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Coad, Felicity, Mohan, Aarthi R., and Nelson-Piercy, Catherine
- Subjects
TREATMENT of epilepsy ,THERAPEUTICS ,MATERNAL mortality ,HEALTH care teams ,NEUROLOGICAL disorders ,PREGNANCY ,PREVENTION - Abstract
Neurological disease encompasses a broad spectrum of conditions which may be affected by pregnancy, present de novo in pregnancy, or are caused by the pregnancy itself. In the Confidential Enquiry into Maternal Deaths Report 2006–2008, 36 women died from diseases of the central nervous system, and 11 of these women were deemed to have had major substandard care. In the 2016 MBRRACE-UK, neurological diseases were the second most frequent cause of indirect maternal death. There was a non-statistically significant decrease in rate of death between 2009–2011 and 2012–2014. New guidelines from the Royal College of Obstetrics and Gynaecology on managing epilepsy in pregnancy, the most common neurological problem in pregnancy, should help improve care in these women and reduce mortality. It is important than any women of child-bearing age with a neurological condition receive appropriate pre-pregnancy counselling and that during pregnancy they are managed by an experienced multi-disciplinary team including a neurologist, specialist nurse or midwife, maternal medicine obstetrician or obstetric physician and obstetric anaesthetist. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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