A case-control study was conducted in Natal, north-east Brazil to determine the risk factors for low birthweight (LBW). Cases were 429 preterm and 422 intrauterine growth retarded (IUGR) singleton infants. Controls were 2555 infants of normal birthweight and gestational age. The prevalence of LBW was 10% (5.1% preterm and 4.9% IUGR). Logistic regression was used to estimate the adjusted odds ratios of LBW, and attributable risk per cent (AR%) was used to estimate the proportion of LBW that might be prevented. The preventable determinants of preterm delivery were births to women less than 20, (AR = 7.1%), low maternal weight less than 50 kg (AR = 20.5%), smoking during pregnancy (AR = 14.6%) and infrequent antenatal visits (AR = 28.1%). Other important determinants of preterm delivery were prior LBW births, gestational illness and vaginal bleeding. The main preventable causes of IUGR were low maternal weight (AR = 17.8%), low maternal education (AR = 11.6%), smoking (AR = 14.8%), and inadequate antenatal care (AR = 11.6%). Other risk factors for IUGR include primiparity, prior LBW births, and illness during gestation. In this population, the focus of short-term preventive programme should be improvement in maternal nutrition, cessation of smoking, reduction of births to women under 20, and improved antenatal care.
The aims of the present study were to identify the cause of hyperprolactinemia in polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) and to compare prolactin (PRL) levels between PCOS women without hyperprolactinemia and women with insulin resistance and without PCOS. A group of 82 women (age: 27.1 +/- 7.6 years) with PCOS was included in the study. Their PRL levels were measured and compared with those of women with insulin resistance without PCOS (controls; n = 42; age: 29.2 +/- 8.2 years). Among the 82 PCOS women, 13 (16%) presented high PRL levels (103.9 +/- 136.0 microg/l). The causes of hyperprolactinemia were: pituitary tumor (responding to cabergoline) in nine cases (69%; PRL range: 28.6 - 538 microg/l); oral hormonal contraceptive treatment in two cases (15%; PRL: 46 and 55 microg/l, respectively); and use of buspirone and tianeptine in one case (8%; PRL: 37.1 microg/l); one case (8%; PRL: 34.4 microg/l) had macroprolactinemia. In drug-induced hyperprolactinemic patients PRL levels normalized after treatment interruption. The average PRL level in the 69 remaining patients was 12.1 +/- 5.5 microg/l, a value not statistically different from that of the control group (11.8 +/- 4.9 microg/l). This result leads us to conclude that PCOS patients with increased PRL levels must be investigated for other causes of hyperprolactinemia, because hyperprolactinemia is not a clinical manifestation of PCOS.
An institution based case-control study to determine risk factors for stillbirths was conducted in the city of Natal, NE Brazil, where 90% of deliveries take place in health facilities. Two hundred thirty-four singleton stillborn cases were compared to 2555 liveborn singleton control infants of normal birth-weight and gestational age. Information was obtained by postnatal interview and anthropometry, and review of medical records. Univariate analyses revealed a large number of potential risk factors, but after adjustment by logistic regression only six factors remained significantly associated with stillbirth. These were low maternal weight, less than or equal to 50 kg and a history of pregnancy loss, both with odds ratios (OR) of 1.8, inadequate prenatal care defined as less than five visits (OR = 1.9), gestational complications (OR = 14.2), intrapartum complications (OR = 2.0), and congenital malformations (OR = 8.7). There was also an increased risk of stillbirth among older mothers who smoked (OR = 1.4), and evidence of an interaction between smoking and complications of pregnancy. From the public health perspective, the most important factors amenable to intervention were inadequate prenatal care and antenatal or intrapartum complications which were associated with substantial attributable risks (23.8%, 35.2%, and 10.2%, respectively). Thus, in this population, future reductions of the high stillbirth rate (27.2 per 1000 births) will largely depend on the coverage, utilization, and quality of antenatal and intrapartum care.
An institution-based surveillance and nested case-control study was conducted in Natal, Northeastern Brazil to estimate the level and determinants of early neonatal mortality. The early neonatal mortality rate was 25.5 per 1000 live-birth, 75% of early neonatal deaths were premature low birthweight infants, and the mortality rates were 591 and 318 per 1000 respectively, for preterm small for gestational age (PT-SGA) and preterm appropriate for gestational age (PT-AGA) infants. Mortality was 50 per 1000 for term low birthweight, and 8.6 for term normal birthweight AGA infants. In addition to prematurity and low birthweight, the main risk factors associated with early neonatal death were maternal smoking, complications during pregnancy or intrapartum, and inadequate antenatal care. The associations were weaker for prepregnancy factors such as single marital status or low maternal body weight, and no significant associations were observed with socioeconomic status. These findings suggest that in this population, efforts to reduce early neonatal death should focus on improved maternal care and the prevention of prematurity.
In a case-control study in Natal, northeast Brazil, conducted between September 1984 and February 1986, 303 cases of intrauterine growth retardation and 282 cases of preterm delivery were compared with 1,710 normal controls to ascertain the effects of the preceding birth-to-conception interval on pregnancy outcome. The risk of intrauterine growth retardation associated with interpregnancy intervals of six months or less was 1.38 (95% confidence interval (CI): 1.02-1.86) after adjustment for maternal age, education, smoking, and prior fetal loss or low birth weight. When maternal postpartum body weight was introduced into the logistic model, the risk of intrauterine growth retardation decreased slightly to 1.25 and was no longer significant (95% CI: 0.91-1.72). Short interpregnancy intervals (six months or less) were more frequently observed in women with postpartum body weight of less than 45 kg (31.1%) than in women weighing 50 kg or more (18.9%), which might suggest that the effect of short intervals on the risk of intrauterine growth retardation is mediated through maternal nutritional status. No association was found between birth-to-conception intervals and preterm delivery.
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