Literature DB >> 17007857

Pre-pregnancy body mass index and pregnancy outcomes.

D A Doherty1, E F Magann, J Francis, J C Morrison, J P Newnham.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine the effect of maternal pre-pregnancy BMI on pregnancy outcomes.
METHODS: Pregnancy cohort recruited pregnancies between 16 and 18 weeks. BMI evaluated underweight, BMI<18.5, normal, BMI 18.5-25, overweight BMI 25-30, and obese BMI>30 women.
RESULTS: Pre-pregnancy BMI classified 331 women as underweight (11.7%), 1982 normal (69.9%), 326 overweight (11.5%), and 188 as obese (6.6%). Obese women were more likely to develop gestational diabetes (p<0.001), hypertension (p<0.001), preeclampsia (p<0.001), need labor induction (p<0.001), cesarean delivery for fetal distress (p<0.001), postpartum hemorrhage (p=0.003), need neonatal resuscitation (p=0.001) and deliver hypoglycemic infants (p=0.007). Being underweight is correlated with fetal growth restriction (p=0.001).
CONCLUSION: Pre-pregnancy obesity is a risk factor for gestational diabetes, preeclampsia, labor induction, cesarean for fetal distress, postpartum hemorrhage and neonatal hypoglycemic and need for resuscitation. Being underweight is risk factor for fetal growth restriction.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2006        PMID: 17007857     DOI: 10.1016/j.ijgo.2006.06.021

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Gynaecol Obstet        ISSN: 0020-7292            Impact factor:   3.561


  66 in total

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10.  Does hypoglycemia following a glucose challenge test identify a high risk pregnancy?

Authors:  Suzanne K Pugh; Dorota A Doherty; Everett F Magann; Suneet P Chauhan; James B Hill; John C Morrison
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