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Pregnancy

About: Pregnancy is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 163969 publications have been published within this topic receiving 4013502 citations. The topic is also known as: pregnancy & gestation.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that circulating STBMs are potential contributors to altered systemic inflammatory responsiveness in pregnancy and pre-eclampsia and bind to monocytes and stimulate the production of inflammatory cytokines.
Abstract: Systemic inflammatory responsiveness was studied in normal human pregnancy and its specific inflammatory disorder, pre-eclampsia. Compared with nonpregnancy, monocytes were primed to produce more TNF-alpha throughout normal pregnancy, more IL-12p70 in the first and second trimesters, and more IL-18 in the first trimester only. Intracellular cytokine measurements (TNF-alpha and IL12p70) showed little change by comparison. IFN-gamma production was suppressed in all three trimesters. In pre-eclampsia, IL-18 secretion was increased. Secreted but not intracellular measures of TNF-alpha and IL-12p70 were also further enhanced compared with normal pregnancy. Inhibition of IFN-gamma production was lost and involved both CD56(+) NK and CD56(-) lymphocyte subsets. We determined whether circulating syncytiotrophoblast microparticles (STBM) could contribute to these inflammatory changes. Unbound STBM could be detected in normal pregnancy by the second trimester and increased significantly in the third. They were also bound in vivo to circulating monocytes. Women with pre-eclampsia had significantly more circulating free but not cell-bound STBMs. STBMs prepared by perfusion of normal placental lobules stimulated production of inflammatory cytokines (TNF-alpha, IL12p70, and IL-18 but not IFN-gamma) when cultured with PBMCs from healthy nonpregnant women. Inflammatory priming of PBMCs during pregnancy is confirmed and is established by the first trimester. It is associated with early inhibition of IFN-gamma production. The inflammatory response is enhanced in pre-eclampsia with loss of the IFN-gamma suppression. Circulating STBMs bind to monocytes and stimulate the production of inflammatory cytokines. It is concluded that they are potential contributors to altered systemic inflammatory responsiveness in pregnancy and pre-eclampsia.

410 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Untreated maternal syphilis is associated with adverse pregnancy outcomes and these findings can inform policy decisions on resource allocation for the detection of syphilis and its timely treatment in pregnant women.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To perform a systematic review and meta-analysis of reported estimates of adverse pregnancy outcomes among untreated women with syphilis and women without syphilis. METHODS: PubMed, EMBASE and Cochrane Libraries were searched for literature assessing adverse pregnancy outcomes among untreated women with seroreactivity for Treponema pallidum infection and non-seroreactive women. Adverse pregnancy outcomes were fetal loss or stillbirth, neonatal death, prematurity or low birth weight, clinical evidence of syphilis and infant death. Random-effects meta-analyses were used to calculate pooled estimates of adverse pregnancy outcomes and, where appropriate, heterogeneity was explored in group-specific analyses. FINDINGS: Of the 3258 citations identified, only six, all case-control studies, were included in the analysis. Pooled estimates showed that among untreated pregnant women with syphilis, fetal loss and stillbirth were 21% more frequent, neonatal deaths were 9.3% more frequent and prematurity or low birth weight were 5.8% more frequent than among women without syphilis. Of the infants of mothers with untreated syphilis, 15% had clinical evidence of congenital syphilis. The single study that estimated infant death showed a 10% higher frequency among infants of mothers with syphilis. Substantial heterogeneity was found across studies in the estimates of all adverse outcomes for both women with syphilis (66.5% [95% confidence interval, CI: 58.0-74.1]; I(2) = 91.8%; P < 0.001) and women without syphilis (14.3% [95% CI: 11.8-17.2]; I(2) = 95.9%; P < 0.001). CONCLUSION: Untreated maternal syphilis is associated with adverse pregnancy outcomes. These findings can inform policy decisions on resource allocation for the detection of syphilis and its timely treatment in pregnant women.

410 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
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.

409 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Apr 2016-BMJ Open
TL;DR: Results of the meta-analysis demonstrated that women who used cannabis during pregnancy had an increase in the odds of anaemia and infants exposed to cannabis in utero were more likely to need placement in the neonatal intensive care unit compared with infants whose mothers did not use cannabis duringregnancy.
Abstract: Objective To assess the effects of use of cannabis during pregnancy on maternal and fetal outcomes. Data sources 7 electronic databases were searched from inception to 1 April 2014. Studies that investigated the effects of use of cannabis during pregnancy on maternal and fetal outcomes were included. Study selection Case–control studies, cross-sectional and cohort studies were included. Data extraction and synthesis Data synthesis was undertaken via systematic review and meta-analysis of available evidence. All review stages were conducted independently by 2 reviewers. Main outcomes and measures Maternal, fetal and neonatal outcomes up to 6 weeks postpartum after exposure to cannabis. Meta-analyses were conducted on variables that had 3 or more studies that measured an outcome in a consistent manner. Outcomes for which meta-analyses were conducted included: anaemia, birth weight, low birth weight, neonatal length, placement in the neonatal intensive care unit, gestational age, head circumference and preterm birth. Results 24 studies were included in the review. Results of the meta-analysis demonstrated that women who used cannabis during pregnancy had an increase in the odds of anaemia (pooled OR (pOR)=1.36: 95% CI 1.10 to 1.69) compared with women who did not use cannabis during pregnancy. Infants exposed to cannabis in utero had a decrease in birth weight (low birth weight pOR=1.77: 95% CI 1.04 to 3.01; pooled mean difference (pMD) for birth weight=109.42 g: 38.72 to 180.12) compared with infants whose mothers did not use cannabis during pregnancy. Infants exposed to cannabis in utero were also more likely to need placement in the neonatal intensive care unit compared with infants whose mothers did not use cannabis during pregnancy (pOR=2.02: 1.27 to 3.21). Conclusions and relevance Use of cannabis during pregnancy may increase adverse outcomes for women and their neonates. As use of cannabis gains social acceptance, pregnant women and their medical providers could benefit from health education on potential adverse effects of use of cannabis during pregnancy.

409 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
07 Aug 2003-Nature
TL;DR: This work clones an adult horse and shows that it is possible to establish a viable, full-term pregnancy in which the surrogate mother is also the nuclear donor, challenging the idea that maternal immunological recognition of fetal antigens influences the well-being of the fetus and the outcome of the pregnancy.
Abstract: Several animal species, including sheep, mice, cattle, goats, rabbits, cats, pigs and, more recently, mules have been reproduced by somatic cell cloning, with the offspring being a genetic copy of the animal donor of the nuclear material used for transfer into an enucleated oocyte. Here we use this technology to clone an adult horse and show that it is possible to establish a viable, full-term pregnancy in which the surrogate mother is also the nuclear donor. The cloned offspring is therefore genetically identical to the mare who carried it, challenging the idea that maternal immunological recognition of fetal antigens influences the well-being of the fetus and the outcome of the pregnancy.

409 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20246
202312,193
202225,740
20218,002
20207,983
20196,948