Acute RDS occurs more frequently in pregnancy than the 1.5 cases per 100,000 per year reported for the general population. Prolonged ventilator support is warranted. The high rate of perinatal asphyxia in infants who have fetal heart rate abnormalities supports a strategy of expeditious delivery during the third trimester.
The study was designed to investigate the implications of the sonographic diagnosis of the two-vessel umbilical cord for patient counselling and pregnancy management. Retrospective analysis was carried out of prenatal findings and pregnancy outcomes when a two-vessel cord was diagnosed in utero. Eighty-two fetuses each with a single umbilical artery were diagnosed by ultrasound. Ten were aneuploid, including nine with visible structural defects and one with early onset intrauterine growth retardation. Of the remaining 72, 31 had other anomalies diagnosed postnatally; 27 of these had structural defects detected on ultrasound examination. However, in nine of these 27 sonographically abnormal fetuses, one or more major structural defects were missed by ultrasound examination. Among the 45 chromosomally normal fetuses with no visible defects on scan, four had anomalies diagnosed after birth. Among the chromosomally normal singletons, six of 22 with other anomalies seen on scan and seven of 38 with no other visible defects on scan had intrauterine growth retardation. Among chromosomally normal twins, one of two with other anomalies seen and two of five appearing otherwise normal had intrauterine growth retardation; one twin set was delivered at 23 weeks after the demise of both twins. Karyotyping is recommended whenever a two-vessel cord is seen in association with symmetric intrauterine growth retardation or any other defect. The fetus diagnosed with a two-vessel cord and any other anomaly by ultrasound often has additional structural defects not seen on scan. The fetus with an isolated two-vessel cord on scan seldom has unrecognized major anomalies, but is at risk for intrauterine growth retardation.
Monoamniotic twin pregnancies and cord entanglement in such twins were diagnosed reliably by ultrasound. Abnormal tracings prompting cesarean delivery occurred in two of the five pregnancies with cord entanglement. Amniocentesis reflected pulmonary maturity of both twins in all pregnancies so assessed, and delivery after 32 weeks' gestation, with lung maturity, resulted in good perinatal outcomes. Statistical validity of these findings is limited by our small sample size.
Objective
To identify perinatal variables associated with adverse outcomes in infants prenatally diagnosed with gastroschisis.
Methods
A retrospective review was conducted of all inborn pregnancies complicated by gastroschisis within the five institutions of the University of California Fetal Consortium from 2007 to 2012. The primary outcome was a composite adverse neonatal outcome comprising death, re-operation, gastrostomy, and necrotizing enterocolitis. Variables collected included antenatal ultrasound findings, maternal smoking or drug use, gestational age at delivery, preterm labor, elective delivery, mode of delivery, and birth weight. Univariate and multivariate analysis was utilized to assess factors associated with adverse outcomes. We also evaluated the e association of preterm delivery with neonatal outcomes such as total parenteral nutrition (TPN) cholestasis and length of stay.
Results
There were 191 infants born with gastroschisis in University of California Fetal Consortium institutions at a mean gestational age of 36 3/7 ± 1.8 weeks. Within the cohort, 27 (14%) had one or more major adverse outcomes including three deaths (1.6%). Early gestational age at delivery was the only variable identified as a significant predictor of adverse outcomes on both univariate and multivariate analysis (OR 1.4; 95% CI 1.1-1.8 for each earlier week of gestation). TPN cholestasis was significantly more common in infants delivered < 37 weeks of gestational age (38/115 (33%) compared with 11/76 (15%); p<0.001).
Conclusions
In this contemporary cohort, earlier gestational age at delivery is associated with adverse neonatal outcomes in infants with gastroschisis. Other variables such as antenatal ultrasound findings and mode of delivery did not predict adverse neonatal outcomes.
Inadequate gestational weight gain at 20 to 28 weeks in twin pregnancies was the strongest predictor of PTB at <32 weeks. This represents an optimal time for interventions to improve weight gain and potentially decrease rates of PTB.
Excessive GWG is associated with a higher risk for gestational hypertension and preeclampsia, but no other adverse perinatal outcomes. Infants born to mothers with excessive GWG are less likely to be small for gestational age than those born to women with adequate GWG.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.