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Serum uric acid levels associated with biochemical parameters linked to preeclampsia severity and to adverse perinatal outcomes

Authors :
Elaine Luiza Santos Soares de Mendonça
João Victor Farias da Silva
Carolina Santos Mello
Alane Cabral Menezes de Oliveira
Source :
Archives of Gynecology and Obstetrics. 305:1453-1463
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Evaluating the association between serum uric acid levels and biochemical parameters linked to preeclampsia (PE) severity and to adverse perinatal outcomes.Cross-sectional study. Information about gestational and biochemical parameters were collected before delivery, whereas perinatal outcomes were observed after it. Pregnant women were divided into hyperuricemia-HU (uric acid ≥ 6 mg/dL) or normouricemia (uric acid, 2.6-5.9 mg/dL) groups. Poisson regression models (prevalence ratio-PR; 95% confidence interval-95% CI), multinomial logistic regression (odds ratio-OR; 95% CI), and Pearson's correlation (correlation coefficient-r) were applied by taking into consideration p 0.05 as significance level.The total sample comprised 267 pregnant women with PE. HU was observed in 25.8% of patients; it was associated with black pregnant women (p = 0.014) and with primiparity (p = 0.007). Uric acid levels were higher in early PE cases than in late PE cases (p = 0.013); however, there was no significant difference between mild and severe PE cases (p = 0.121). Uric acid recorded a positive correlation to urea (p 0.001), creatinine (p = 0.002), glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase (p 0.001), glutamic-pyruvic transaminase (p = 0.005), ferritin (p = 0.002) and globulin (p = 0.002); as well as negative correlation to platelets (p = 0.035), lactic dehydrogenase (p = 0.039) and albumin (p 0.001). HU was a factor associated with cesarean delivery (p = 0.030), prematurity (p = 0.001), low birth weight (p 0.001) and small for gestational age (p = 0.020).High serum uric acid levels were associated with early-onset PE. Maternal features were correlated to biochemical parameters linked to PE severity and to adverse perinatal outcomes.

Details

ISSN :
14320711
Volume :
305
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Archives of Gynecology and Obstetrics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9d5beb5a0e2172a80d178c2c03f81db4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00404-021-06313-2