| Literature DB >> 20108518 |
Corina Grigoriu1, Cristina Cezar, Mirela Grigoras, Irina Horhoianu, Corina Parau, Petrache Vîrtej, Adina Lungu, V Horhoianu, Catalina Poiana.
Abstract
UNLABELLED: Maternal hypertiroidism is a relative rare disorder, which can seriously complicate pregnancy in each of its periods. There are several maternal and fetal complications during pregnancy, delivery and postpartum period. Correct management includes an accurate diagnosis, rigorous individualized treatment and minutious follow-up. We are presenting a retrospective study of 38 pregnant women who delivered in the Obstetric Unit of the University Emergency Bucharest Hospital in the past five years. We established a follow-up protocol in collaboration with endocrinologists. Precocious diagnosis of pregnancy is, in our opinion, mandatory. Accurate diagnosis of hormonal status beginning from the first week of pregnancy is of great importance. Maternal (weight, BP, TSH, thyroid hormones, ECG, etc.) and fetal (ultrasound, non-stress test, Doppler study) evaluation during pregnancy were rigorous performed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 20108518 PMCID: PMC3018974
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Life ISSN: 1844-122X
Fig 1Management of hyperthyroidism in pregnancy (7)
Guidelines for measurements of TSH – receptor antibodies in a pregnant woman with Grave's disease ( 9)
| Patient status | Antibodies measurement |
|---|---|
| Euthyroid – previous antithyroid drugs | Not necessary |
| Euthyroid ± T4 therapy and Previous radioiodine therapy/surgery | Check in early pregnancy:if low or absent no further testing or if high: check fetus and check antibodies in last trimester |
| Receiving antithyroid drugs during pregnancy | Measure in last trimester |