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Journal ArticleDOI

Placental Abruption and Perinatal Mortality in the United States

TLDR
The link between fetal growth restriction and abruption suggests that the origins of abruption lie at least in midpregnancy and perhaps even earlier, and the high risk of perinatal death associated with abruption persisted.
Abstract: 
Placental abruption is an uncommon obstetric complication associated with high perinatal mortality rates. The authors explored the associations of abruption with fetal growth restriction, preterm delivery, and perinatal survival. The study was based on 7,508,655 singleton births delivered in 1995 and 1996 in the United States. Abruption was recorded in 6.5 per 1,000 births. Perinatal mortality was 119 per 1,000 births with abruption compared with 8.2 per 1,000 among all other births. The high mortality with abruption was due, in part, to its strong association with preterm delivery; 55% of the excess perinatal deaths with abruption were due to early delivery. Furthermore, babies in the lowest centile of weight ( or =90%) birth weight centiles. This relative risk progressively declined with higher birth weight centiles. After controlling for fetal growth restriction and early delivery, the high risk of perinatal death associated with abruption persisted. Even babies born at 40 weeks of gestation and birth weight of 3,500-3,999 g (where mortality was lowest) had a 25-fold higher mortality with abruption. The link between fetal growth restriction and abruption suggests that the origins of abruption lie at least in midpregnancy and perhaps even earlier.

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Citations
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Overadjustment bias and unnecessary adjustment in epidemiologic studies.

TL;DR: This work uses causal diagrams and an empirical example (the effect of maternal smoking on neonatal mortality) to illustrate and clarify the definition of overadjustment bias, and to distinguish over adjustment bias from unnecessary adjustment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intrauterine growth restriction.

TL;DR: Careful monitoring of fetal growth and well-being, combined with appropriate timing and mode of delivery, can best ensure a favorable outcome.
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Screening for thrombophilia in high-risk situations: systematic review and cost-effectiveness analysis. The Thrombosis: Risk and Economic Assessment of Thrombophilia Screening (TREATS) study

TL;DR: A systematic review of the literature on VTE and thrombophilia in women using oral oestrogen preparations and patients undergoing major orthopaedic surgery and the effectiveness of prophylaxis found homozygous carriers of this mutation are 34 times more likely to develop VTE in pregnancy than non-carriers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Previous cesarean delivery and risks of placenta previa and placental abruption.

TL;DR: A cesarean first birth is associated with increased risks of previa and abruption in the second pregnancy, and there is a dose–response pattern in the risk ofprevia, with increasing number of prior cesAREan deliveries.
Journal ArticleDOI

Caesarean section and risk of unexplained stillbirth in subsequent pregnancy

TL;DR: Delivery by caesarean section in the first pregnancy could increase the risk of unexplained stillbirth in the second, and the relative risk of antepartumStillbirth in second pregnancies using time-to-event analyses was estimated.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Increased frequency of genetic thrombophilia in women with complications of pregnancy.

TL;DR: Women with serious obstetrical complications have an increased incidence of mutations predisposing them to thrombosis and other inherited and acquired forms ofThrombophilia.
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Genomic imprinting in mammals.

TL;DR: Although the function of imprinting remains a subject of some debate, the process is thought to have an important role in regulating the rate of fetal growth.
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Placental abruption and adverse perinatal outcomes.

TL;DR: In this cohort of singleton births between 1986 and 1996, placental abruption had a profound impact on stillbirth, preterm delivery, and fetal growth restriction.
Journal ArticleDOI

The quality of the new birth certificate data: a validation study in North Carolina.

TL;DR: This study suggests that many of the new birth certificate items will support valid aggregate analyses for maternal and child health research and evaluation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Placental abruption and its association with hypertension and prolonged rupture of membranes : A methodologic review and meta-analysis

TL;DR: Risk of abruption is strongly associated with chronic hypertension, PROM, and especially abruption in a prior pregnancy, and somewhat more modestly with pre-eclampsia.
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