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Journal ArticleDOI

The influence of prepregnancy body mass index on labor complications.

TLDR
The heavy use of labor augmentation indicates that obese women should not be recommended to give birth in an ABC-clinic or at home, and overweight and obesity are only weak predictors of labor complications, given a normal pregnancy.
Abstract
Background. To investigate the influence of Body Mass Index on the incidence of labor complications in a population of women with a normal pregnancy. Material and methods. From a local database, information on maternal weight and height was extracted concerning 4258 women who had an uncomplicated pregnancy. After calculation and stratification with respect to Body Mass Index, this was retrospectively related to labor interventions and complications. Results. High Body Mass Index was related to more oxytocin infusion and early amniotomy, but not to vacuum extraction or cesarean section. Primary inertia and, to a minor degree, cephalopelvic disproportion and secondary inertia were seen more often in women with high Body Mass Index. Conclusions. Overweight (25.0 =30.0) are only weak predictors of labor complications, given a normal pregnancy. However, the heavy use of labor augmentation indicates that obese women should not be recommended to give birth in an ABC-clinic or at home.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The impact of maternal BMI status on pregnancy outcomes with immediate short-term obstetric resource implications: a meta-analysis.

TL;DR: Meta‐analysis shows a significant relationship between obesity and increased odds of caesarean and instrumental deliveries, haemorrhage, infection, longer duration of hospital stay and increased neonatal intensive care requirement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Maternal obesity and risk of cesarean delivery: a meta-analysis.

TL;DR: A meta‐analysis of the current literature to provide a quantitative estimate of the risk of cesarean delivery associated with high maternal body mass found no evidence that these estimates were affected by selected study characteristics.
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.
Journal ArticleDOI

Maternal prepregnancy overweight and obesity and the pattern of labor progression in term nulliparous women

TL;DR: Labor progression in overweight and obese women was significantly slower than that of normal-weight women before 6 cm of cervical dilation, given that nearly one half of women of childbearing age are either overweight or obese.
Journal ArticleDOI

Obesity as an independent risk factor for elective and emergency caesarean delivery in nulliparous women--systematic review and meta-analysis of cohort studies.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the association between increasing maternal body mass index (BMI) and elective/emergency caesarean delivery rates and found that women with higher BMI were more likely to have emergency caesar-section.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Prepregnancy Weight and the Risk of Adverse Pregnancy Outcomes

TL;DR: Higher maternal weight before pregnancy increases the risk of late fetal death, although it protects against the delivery of a small-for-gestational-age infant.
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Pregnancy outcome and weight gain recommendations for the morbidly obese woman

TL;DR: Gestation weight gain was not associated with adverse perinatal outcome, but it did influence neonatal outcome and to reduce the risk of delivery of an LGA newborn, the optimal gestational weight gain for morbidly obese women should not exceed 25%.
Journal ArticleDOI

Massive maternal obesity and perioperative cesarean morbidity

TL;DR: No significant differences were observed between groups for maternal age, parity, use of prophylactic antibiotics, length of recovery room stay, or wound dehiscence.
Journal ArticleDOI

Association between pre-pregnancy obesity and the risk of cesarean delivery

TL;DR: Compared with nonobese women, women who are obese before pregnancy are at increased risk for cesarean delivery and preconceptional counseling regarding dietary and life-style nmodifications may alter this pattern.
Journal Article

Maternal obesity and pregnancy

TL;DR: It is concluded that maternal obesity should be considered a high risk factor for gestational diabetes, hypertension, therapeutic induction, prolonged second stage of labor, oxytocin stimulation of Labor, shoulder dystocia and delivery after 42 weeks gestation.
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