Literature DB >> 7947526

Discordant birthweight and late fetal death in like-sexed and unlike-sexed twin pairs: a population-based study.

H Rydhström1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To study the relation between pregnancy loss (one or two fetal deaths in a pair) in twin pregnancy and gender (like-sexed and unlike-sexed pairs), discordant birthweight, and placentation.
DESIGN: The type of placentation for gestations with pregnancy loss was studied, based on material retrieved from the original medical records, for a defined region comprising 20.0% of the total twin population. SUBJECTS AND
SETTING: Four thousand one hundred and ninety-one unlike-sexed and 10,875 like-sexed twin pairs born in Sweden between 1973 and 1989, in most cases with a gestational duration 28 or more completed weeks.
RESULTS: The relative risk (RR) for pregnancy loss in like-sexed pairs, compared with unlike-sexed ones, was 2.3 and the 95% confidence limits (CL) 1.7-3.1. Not until discordance exceeded 999 g did the pregnancy loss rate for unlike-sexed pairs increase significantly, compared with the (first) stratum with discordance less than 250 g (RR = 6.3; CL 3.5-11.3). For like-sexed twin pairs a higher pregnancy loss rate, compared with the first stratum, was seen already in the stratum with discordance 250-499 g (RR = 1.3; CL 1.0-1.8); a significant increase in pregnancy loss rate was found in all the three strata 500-749 g (RR = 2.1; CL 1.5-3.0), 750-999 g (RR = 3.5; CL 2.3-3.0), and 1000 g or more (RR = 10.9; CL 8.4-14.2), respectively. When calculating the discordance as a percentage of the weight of the larger twin, unlike-sexed pairs experienced a significant increase in pregnancy loss when discordance exceeded 40 to 50%. For like-sexed ones, the corresponding figures were 20 to 30%. In the 47 unlike-sexed pregnancies complicated by pregnancy loss, both twins died in two pregnancies (4.3%), whereas for like-sexed pairs the corresponding figures were 65/279 (23.3%). Of 47 gestations with pregnancy loss in a defined region, 32 were monochorionic (monozygous), nine were like-sexed dichorionic (monozygous or dizygous), and six were unlike-sexed (dizygous).
CONCLUSIONS: Pregnancy loss was twice as high in like-sexed compared with unlike-sexed pairs, and only in like-sexed pairs was pregnancy loss strongly correlated to birthweight discordance. In twin pregnancies with one fetal death the risk for the surviving twin to succumb is five to six times higher in like-sexed compared with unlike-sexed pairs and is most probably related to monochorionicity.

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Mesh:

Year:  1994        PMID: 7947526

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Obstet Gynaecol        ISSN: 0306-5456


  5 in total

1.  Morbidity and mortality of discordant twins up to 34 weeks of gestational age.

Authors:  J Sonntag; S Waltz; T Schollmeyer; U Schuppler; H Schroder; D Weisner
Journal:  Eur J Pediatr       Date:  1996-03       Impact factor: 3.183

Review 2.  [Twins and multiple pregnancy].

Authors:  B Arabin; P Husslein
Journal:  Arch Gynecol Obstet       Date:  1995       Impact factor: 2.344

3.  Early-life mortality risks in opposite-sex and same-sex twins: a Danish cohort study of the twin testosterone transfer hypothesis.

Authors:  Linda Juel Ahrenfeldt; Lisbeth Aagaard Larsen; Rune Lindahl-Jacobsen; Axel Skytthe; Jacob V B Hjelmborg; Sören Möller; Kaare Christensen
Journal:  Ann Epidemiol       Date:  2016-12-09       Impact factor: 3.797

4.  Cortisol advantage of neighbouring the opposite sex in utero.

Authors:  R Fishman; Y Vortman; U Shanas; L Koren
Journal:  R Soc Open Sci       Date:  2018-09-05       Impact factor: 2.963

5.  Serratia marcescens as a cause of unfavorable outcome in the twin pregnancy.

Authors:  Duško Kljakić; Miloš Z Milosavljević; Milan Jovanović; Vesna Čolaković Popović; Saša Raičević
Journal:  Open Med (Wars)       Date:  2020-12-17
  5 in total

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