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PP139. The elective prematurity birth and its perinatal effects of syndromes in hypertensive pregnancy

Authors :
P.G. Figueiredo
Naiara Barbosa Franco Marra
M. Scarpelini
S.S.T. Uchiyama
Francisco Lazaro Pereira de Sousa
Vivian Macedo Gomes Marçal
Nelson Sass
J.M. Garcia
Sérgio Floriano de Toledo
S.M. Reimão
Rogério Gomes dos Reis Guidoni
Source :
Pregnancy Hypertension: An International Journal of Women's Cardiovascular Health. 2:315
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2012.

Abstract

Introduction The hypertensive pregnancy disorders affect 7.5% of Brazilian women, being a major cause of maternal and perinatal morbidity and mortality, affecting 6–10% of primigravidae. They represent a significant cause of prematurity birth, with elective responsible for 20–30% of premature births, with higher incidence of neonatal morbidity due to high rates of complications in short and long term. Objectives Identify the repercussions in a short time, on caused by elective obstetric parity decisions in women with hypertensive neonatals pregnancy syndromes. Methods Retrospective analysis of medical records of pregnant women admitted to Hospital Guilherme Alvaro, in the city of Santos/SP - Brazil, between Jan/2005 to Jan/2012. Calculations were performed for dichotomous variables and an epidemiological analysis with data obtained on pregnant women with hypertension with a single fetus, subjected to delivery before 37 weeks. Classification of Hypertensive Syndromes followed the criteria of the NHBPEP – 2000, after blood pressure measurements were calibrated following standard technique: Chronic hypertension (CH), Pre-eclampsia, superimposed pre-eclampsia and late gestational hypertension and multiple births were excluded, premature labor and fetal malformations, totaling 102 cases. Results Throughout the study, it was observed that 67.6% are appropriate for gestational age, birth weight 1500–2500 grams (43.1%). Support in the neonatal were excluded ICU was necessary in the vast majority (75.7%), and length of stay exceeding 28 days in 29.3% of cases. The main indication was respiratory distress syndrome (63.6%) requiring intubation orotraquel and jaundice in 18.2% of premature infants was a common comorbidity (39.4%). Even with all the support in-hospital, the neonatal mortality was present in 8.1% of cases. The main indication of the resolution was for obstetric maternal complications (61.8%) where pre-eclampsia and preeclampsia superimposed were expressions which caused more frequent (42.2 and 40.2% respectively), showing the level of proteinuria between two -4.9 g (32.1%). Gestational age at delivery was 32–34 weeks (43.1%), corticosteroid therapy was not performed (54.9%) and cesarean delivery was (94.1%). The most frequent age group was 20–34 years (53.9%), Caucasian (54.9%), primigravida (62.7%) and less than five prenatal visits (36.3%) were performed. Conclusion The hypertensive pregnancy are risk factors for preterm elective delivery and is more frequent before 34 weeks, resulting in high perinatal morbidity and mortality, especially in cases of preeclampsia with severe clinical presentation and long hospital stays, with consequent costs and conducting excessive procedures in the neonate. Enable early referral to specialist services and consequent prenatal follow up, enables the adoption of early action, such as clinical support in a timely manner to facilitate the handling of cases which are still stable, optimizing the opportunity for administration of antenatal corticosteroids. It is necessary to review decisions about the mode of delivery in prematurity related to hypertension cases, with the aim of increasing the occurrence of vaginal deliveries.

Details

ISSN :
22107789
Volume :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pregnancy Hypertension: An International Journal of Women's Cardiovascular Health
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....77c03a5acb0b16407600504c10d7006c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.preghy.2012.04.250