C
Christoph Lees
Researcher at Imperial College Healthcare
Publications - 329
Citations - 9380
Christoph Lees is an academic researcher from Imperial College Healthcare. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pregnancy & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 46, co-authored 301 publications receiving 7267 citations. Previous affiliations of Christoph Lees include Imperial College London & National Institutes of Health.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Perinatal morbidity and mortality in early-onset fetal growth restriction: cohort outcomes of the trial of randomized umbilical and fetal flow in Europe (TRUFFLE)
Christoph Lees,Christoph Lees,Neil Marlow,Birgit Arabin,C. M. Bilardo,Christoph Brezinka,J. B. Derks,J.J. Duvekot,Tiziana Frusca,Anke Diemert,Enrico Ferrazzi,Wessel Ganzevoort,Kurt Hecher,Pasquale Martinelli,E. Ostermayer,Aris T. Papageorghiou,Dietmar Schlembach,Ktm Schneider,Baskaran Thilaganathan,Tullia Todros,A. G. van Wassenaer-Leemhuis,Adriana Valcamonico,Gerard H. A. Visser,Hans Wolf +23 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report cohort outcomes for a prospective multicenter randomized management study of fetal growth restriction (Trial of Randomized Umbilical and Fetal Flow in Europe (TRUFFLE)) performed in 20 European perinatal centers between 2005 and 2010.
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ISUOG Practice Guidelines: use of Doppler ultrasonography in obstetrics
Amar Bhide,Ganesh Acharya,Caterina M. Bilardo,Christoph Brezinka,D. Cafici,Edgar Hernandez-Andrade,Edgar Hernandez-Andrade,Karim D. Kalache,John Kingdom,Torvid Kiserud,Wesley Lee,Christoph Lees,Christoph Lees,Kwok Yin Leung,G. Malinger,Giancarlo Mari,Federico Prefumo,Waldo Sepulveda,Brian Trudinger +18 more
TL;DR: The International Society of Ultrasound in Obstetrics and Gynecology is a scientific organization that encourages sound clinical practice, teaching and research related to diagnostic imaging in women’s healthcare.
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Doppler ultralsound of the uterine arteries: the importance of bilateral notching in the prediction of pre-eclampsia, placental abruption or delivery of a small-for-gestational-age baby
TL;DR: The use of Doppler studies of the uterine arteries in the prediction of pre‐eclampsia and intrauterine growth retardation has had mixed success, but the introduction of color Dopplers imaging and the use of the ‘notch’ to define an abnormal waveform have helped to improve the predictive value of uterine artery doppler screening.
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One-stage screening for pregnancy complications by color Doppler assessment of the uterine arteries at 23 weeks’ gestation
TL;DR: A one-stage color Doppler screening program at 23 weeks identified most women who subsequently developed serious complications of impaired placentation associated with delivery before 34 weeks, and the screening results were similar when the high-risk group was defined as women with increased PI or bilateral notches.
Journal ArticleDOI
2 year neurodevelopmental and intermediate perinatal outcomes in infants with very preterm fetal growth restriction (TRUFFLE): a randomised trial
Christoph Lees,Christoph Lees,Neil Marlow,Aleid G. van Wassenaer-Leemhuis,Birgit Arabin,Caterina M. Bilardo,Christoph Brezinka,Sandra Calvert,Jan B. Derks,Anke Diemert,Johannes J. Duvekot,Enrico Ferrazzi,Tiziana Frusca,Tiziana Frusca,Wessel Ganzevoort,Kurt Hecher,Pasquale Martinelli,E. Ostermayer,Aris T. Papageorghiou,Dietmar Schlembach,Karl-Theo Maria Schneider,Baskaran Thilaganathan,Tullia Todros,Adriana Valcamonico,Gerard H. A. Visser,Hans Wolf +25 more
TL;DR: The proportion of infants surviving without neuroimpairment was non-significant at the primary endpoint, and timing of delivery based on the study protocol using late changes in the DV waveform might produce an improvement in developmental outcomes at 2 years of age.