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Doppler umbilical velocimetry in the prediction of adverse outcome in pregnancies at risk for intrauterine growth retardation
Authors:G S Berkowitz  K E Mehalek  U Chitkara  J Rosenberg  C Cogswell  R L Berkowitz
Affiliation:Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Science, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, New York.
Abstract:Perinatal indicators of fetal compromise were assessed according to the results of continuous-wave Doppler umbilical velocimetry for 172 patients at risk for intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR). Forty-three (25%) of the patients delivered an infant with a birth weight below the tenth percentile for gestational age. The last Doppler study before delivery was abnormal in 48.8% of the growth-retarded infants but in only 13.2% of the infants without evidence of IUGR. Furthermore, in the growth-retarded group, early delivery, reduced birth weight, decreased amniotic fluid at birth, admission to the neonatal intensive care unit, neonatal complications associated with IUGR, and a prolonged hospital stay were observed more frequently in those who had an abnormal ratio than in those with a normal ratio. The sensitivity of the systolic/diastolic ratio for an adverse perinatal outcome (operative delivery for fetal distress, neonatal morbidity associated with IUGR, and/or perinatal death) was significantly better for the infants with IUGR (66.7%) than for the infants without IUGR (27.8%; P less than .05). The predictive value of an abnormal ratio was also higher for the pregnancies complicated with IUGR (57.1%) than for those without IUGR (29.4%), but not to a statistically significant degree. These data suggest that Doppler umbilical velocimetry studies are valuable in identifying those growth-retarded fetuses at increased risk for an adverse perinatal outcome.
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