An extensive and relevant test protocol provides information as to the cause of death in the majority of cases. Future protocols should include tests for autoimmune antibodies and feto-maternal transfusion.
A random sample of 798 primiparas was screened with clinical evaluation and radiologic low-dose pelvimetry of the pelvic outlet. The purpose was to study the accuracy of clinical evaluation in comparison with X-ray pelvimetry and to determine whether clinical evaluation could reveal any other factor influencing labor. A significant agreement between clinical and X-ray pelvimetry was found, but the sensitivity of clinical evaluation was low and as many as half the patients with a contracted pelvis, according to pelvimetry, were not detected. Delivery outcomes in two matched groups with similar pelvic outlet measurements but different clinical evaluation did not differ, indicating that clinical evaluation did not detect any other factor not revealed by X-ray pelvimetry.
A case is reported of a ruptured endometriotic lesion following childbirth. Immediately after her second delivery, the 34-year-old parturient developed acute abdominal pain. At operation a ruptured left-sided ovarian abscess with a fistula to the colon was found. Endometriosis was present in the ovarian wall and the adjacent colon. Endometriosis as a cause of acute abdominal pain during pregnancy should be kept in mind.
The influence of pelvic outlet capacity on labor and the efficiency of routine low-dose radiological pelvimetry to anticipate dystocia during labor were studied prospectively among 1,429 unselected term primiparas, all having fetal head presentation and normal pregnancy. Outlet contraction was found in 0.9% and borderline outlet measurement in 5.3%. In 1,402 cases labor started spontaneously and 83 emergency cesarean sections were done. The incidence of cesarean section because of dystocia increased in inverse proportion to decreasing pelvic outlet capacity. The incidence of other emergency cesarean sections was not influenced by pelvic outlet size. In 79% of cesarean section interventions due to dystocia, pelvic outlet capacity was normal. Apgar score less than 7 at one minute was more commonly associated with a small pelvic outlet. Apgar score at 5 minutes and neonatal morbidity were not influenced by pelvic outlet size. Pelvic outlet capacity had a marked influence on the mode of delivery, but the practical value of radiological pelvimetry by fetal head presentation is rarely considered, except in very selected cases.
From 1983 to 1989, 147,068 pregnancies were analyzed for allo-immunization against erythrocyte antigens. Approximately half of the cases were due to immunization against factor D and the others were due to allo-immunization against other antigens (K, c, E, etc.). In 61 cases exchange transfusion of the newborn was needed and in 115 cases diagnostic amniocentesis was done during pregnancy. Intrauterine transfusions were performed in 10 cases. Fetal and neonatal mortality was 4% in these moderate to severe cases, all due to immunization against D. Immunization against D was due to failure to give immunoglobulin anti-D in about 2/3 of the cases. Systematic prophylactic treatment with anti-D during pregnancy would probably not be cost-effective in this population.
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