R
Roger K. Freeman
Researcher at University of California, Irvine
Publications - 76
Citations - 3936
Roger K. Freeman is an academic researcher from University of California, Irvine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pregnancy & Contraction stress test. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 76 publications receiving 3854 citations. Previous affiliations of Roger K. Freeman include Alcoa & LAC+USC Medical Center.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Management and outcome of Class A diabetes mellitus
TL;DR: Data indicate that as long as the FSG remains normal, an unexplained intrauterine death is a rare event in Class A women delivered at LAC Women's Hospital.
Journal Article
Chorioamnionitis in the preterm gestation.
TL;DR: Neither trial of labor nor duration of labor in patients with chorioamnionitis correlated with adverse neonatal outcome, however, the appearance of maternal fever prior to the onset of labor correlated more significantly with neonatal death and RDS in the newborn that did the development of maternal Fever in the intrapartum period.
Journal ArticleDOI
A prospective multi-institutional study of antepartum fetal heart rate monitoring. I. Risk of perinatal mortality and morbidity according to antepartum fetal heart rate test results.
Roger K. Freeman,Roger K. Freeman,Roger K. Freeman,Gerald G. Anderson,Gerald G. Anderson,Gerald G. Anderson,Wendy Dorchester,Wendy Dorchester,Wendy Dorchester +8 more
TL;DR: Nonreactive nonstress tests and nonreactive positive contraction stress tests were associated with significantly increased morbidity and mortality and the presence of persistent late decelerations (positive contraction stress test) appeared to be an earlier warning sign of fetal deterioration than did the loss of reactivity.
Journal Article
Macrosomia--maternal, fetal, and neonatal implications.
TL;DR: This study revealed that macrosomic fetuses do not experience greater fetal distress in biophysically monitored labor than appropriate-weight term-size fetuses, and excess neonatal morbidity in the macrosomic neonates was predominantly caused by the delivery process.
Journal ArticleDOI
Management and outcome of pregnancy in diabetes mellitus, classes B to R.
Steven G. Gabbe,Jorge H. Mestman,Roger K. Freeman,Uwe Goebelsmann,Richard I. Lowensohn,David J. Nochimson,Curtis L. Cetrulo,Edward J. Quilligan +7 more
TL;DR: During the period 1971 to 1975, 260 women with diabetes mellitus, Classes B through R, were delivered of their infants at Los Angeles County Women's Hospital, with a perinatal mortality rate in these diabetic pregnant women as compared to 24 per 1,000 in the general population.