T Chard1. 1. Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, St Bartholomew's and The Royal London School of Medicine and Dentistry, London, UK.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate whether the fetus loses weight in uttero following fetal death, looking specifically at weight differences according to whether the death occurred during labour or before labour. DESIGN: Record linkage of maternity data and perinatal mortality data. SETTING: Scotland, UK. Population A group of 8,069 singleton live and stillbirths without obvious congenital abnormalities delivered at 24-32 weeks. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Birthweight. RESULTS: Stillborn infants weighed less than liveborns of equivalent gestational age at delivery. Stillborn infants in whom the death occurred during labour weighed more than those in whom the death occurred before labour; this applied to both vaginal deliveries and those by caesarean section. CONCLUSIONS: These findings could be attributed to the hypothesis that the low birthweight of stillborn infants is due to weight loss following the death, in addition to any process of growth restriction before the death. The analysis described here contains no data which would negate this hypothesis.
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate whether the fetus loses weight in uttero following fetal death, looking specifically at weight differences according to whether the death occurred during labour or before labour. DESIGN: Record linkage of maternity data and perinatal mortality data. SETTING: Scotland, UK. Population A group of 8,069 singleton live and stillbirths without obvious congenital abnormalities delivered at 24-32 weeks. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Birthweight. RESULTS: Stillborn infants weighed less than liveborns of equivalent gestational age at delivery. Stillborn infants in whom the death occurred during labour weighed more than those in whom the death occurred before labour; this applied to both vaginal deliveries and those by caesarean section. CONCLUSIONS: These findings could be attributed to the hypothesis that the low birthweight of stillborn infants is due to weight loss following the death, in addition to any process of growth restriction before the death. The analysis described here contains no data which would negate this hypothesis.
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