Literature DB >> 20492373

Maternal mortality and cesarean delivery: an analytical observational study.

Gourisankar Kamilya1, Subrata Lall Seal, Joydev Mukherji, Subir Kumar Bhattacharyya, Avijit Hazra.   

Abstract

AIM: Pregnant women and their doctors need to know the maternal risks associated with different methods of delivery. There are few publications with ideal study design and adequate power to establish the relationship between maternal mortality and mode of delivery. The present retrospective cohort study was undertaken to evaluate the intrinsic risk of maternal death, directly attributed to cesarean delivery (CD) compared to vaginal delivery (VD), and to evaluate further the differential risk associated with antepartum and intrapartum CD.
METHODS: After exclusion of medical or obstetric comorbidities, all deliveries, either vaginal or cesarean, were critically analyzed. The surviving mothers who had either method of delivery represented the two comparative groups. In the same period, relevant clinical information of every maternal death was noted.
RESULTS: Twenty seven mothers died among the 13 627 CD mothers and 19 died among 30 215 VD mothers. CD was associated with a 3.01-fold increase in the risk of maternal mortality, compared with VD. The risk of antepartum CD differed from intrapartum CD (OR 1.73 vs OR 4.86). There was a significantly increased risk of maternal death from complications of anesthesia, puerperal infection and venous thromboembolism. The risk of death from postpartum hemorrhage did not differ significantly (95% CI 0.7-3.95).
CONCLUSION: CD is increasingly perceived as a low-risk procedure. However, the present study clearly demonstrates that the risk of maternal death due to CD is significantly high, particularly when performed in labor. Therefore, CD should only be practiced when conditions clearly demand it.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20492373     DOI: 10.1111/j.1447-0756.2009.01125.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Obstet Gynaecol Res        ISSN: 1341-8076            Impact factor:   1.730


  9 in total

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2.  Maternal and perinatal outcomes by mode of delivery in senegal and mali: a cross-sectional epidemiological survey.

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Authors:  Helena Litorp; Hussein L Kidanto; Mattias Rööst; Muzdalifat Abeid; Lennarth Nyström; Birgitta Essén
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7.  Organisational interventions designed to reduce caesarean section rates: a systematic review protocol.

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8.  Cesarean Section and Maternal-fetal Mortality Rates in Nigeria: An Ecological Lens into the Last Decade.

Authors:  Hadiza Galadanci; Deepa Dongarwar; Wolfgang Künzel; Oladapo Shittu; Murtala Yusuf; Sadiq Abdurrahman; Dolapo Lufadeju; Hamisu M Salihu
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9.  Cesarean vs Vaginal Delivery : An Institutional Experience.

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  9 in total

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