1.Maternal and Neonatal Effects of Substance Abuse during Pregnancy: Our Ten-year Experience.
Mirjana VUCINOVIC ; Damir ROJE ; Zoran VUCINOVIC ; Vesna CAPKUN ; Marija BUCAT ; Ivo BANOVIC
Yonsei Medical Journal 2008;49(5):705-713
PURPOSE: The aim of the study was to assess perinatal outcome of pregnancy burdened with maternal addiction in comparison with an unselected population from a European transition country. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Data on pregnancies complicated by illicit drug abuse (n = 85) managed during a 10-year period (1997-2007) at Split University Hospital were analyzed. Data on the type of drug, course of gestation and labor, and on perinatal outcome were considered. Data on all non-dependence pregnancies recorded during the study period were used as a control group. RESULTS: During the study period, there were 85 dependence-complicated pregnancies (0.2%). Use of heroin alone during pregnancy was recorded in 51 women (50%), methadone alone in 6 (7%), and a combination of heroin and methadone in 9 (11%). Premature delivery was significantly more common in the group of pregnant addicts (21% vs. 6%); 49% of pregnant addicts were carriers of hepatitis C virus (HCV) and 14% of hepatitis B virus (HBV). Neonatal abstinence syndrome developed in 61 infants (7%) born to addicted mothers. There were 4 cases (4.6%) of early neonatal death; 7 neonates had 5-minute Apgar score < or = 7 (8%); 29 neonates had low birth weight for age (33%); and 7 neonates had congenital anomalies (8%). The risk of various congenital anomalies was 3-fold in the group of children born to addicted mothers. CONCLUSION: Addiction pregnancies present a small but high-risk group according to perinatal outcome. Appropriate obstetric and neonatal care can reduce the rate of complications in these pregnancies and improve perinatal outcome.
Adult
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Apgar Score
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Birth Weight
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Croatia/epidemiology
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Female
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Heroin/adverse effects
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Heroin Dependence/*complications/drug therapy/epidemiology
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Humans
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Incidence
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Infant Mortality
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Infant, Newborn
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*Maternal Exposure
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Methadone/adverse effects/therapeutic use
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Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome/epidemiology
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Pregnancy
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Pregnancy Complications/*chemically induced/epidemiology
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Pregnancy Complications, Infectious/epidemiology
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*Pregnancy Outcome
2.Gestational Age - the Most Important Factor of Neonatal Ponderal Index.
Damir ROJE ; Banovic IVO ; Tadin IVICA ; Vucinovic MIRJANA ; Capkun VESNA ; Barisic ALJOSA ; Vulic MARKO ; Mestrovic ZORAN ; Mimica MARKO ; Miletic TOMISLAV
Yonsei Medical Journal 2004;45(2):273-280
Ponderal index (fetal weight in grams x 100 / (fetal length in centimeters) 3) (PI) is one of the anthropometric methods used to diagnose impaired fetal growth. Irrespective of the infant's position on the growth-weight-for-gestational age charts, PI is low in malnourished infants and high in obese ones. As fetal growth is affected by ethnicity, geographic location and socioeconomic status, we developed standards for neonatal PI, and assessed the effects of gestational age, sex and maternal parity. Data on 5798 newborns from singleton pregnancies born in the Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics, Split University Hospital, were retrospectively analyzed. Over a 15-month period in 2000/2001, 5596 newborns from 24 to 42 weeks of gestation were born. The other 202 newborns, born from 24 to 34 weeks of gestation in the ten year period, 1990-1999, were added because of the small number of preterm infants; ensuring a minimum of 30 to fill up at least infants in each gestational week. All mothers were of Caucasian origin. Stillbirths and fetuses with congenital malformations were excluded. The 10th, 50th and 90th percentiles, mean values with standard deviation of PI and the 10th, 50th, and 90th percentiles of birth weight and birth length are presented separately at weekly intervals. PI showed linear correlation with gestational age from 24 to 39 weeks, after witch the data plateaued. Sex and parity had no impact on PI in infants born between 24 and 37 weeks. Analysis of variance revealed PI to be significantly higher in female than in male newborns, and in multiparous than in nulliparous infants after 37 weeks of gestation. In conclusion, gestational age is the most important factor of neonatal PI. The effects of sex and parity on PI should only be considered in term neonates.
*Anthropometry
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*Birth Weight
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*Embryo and Fetal Development
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Female
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*Gestational Age
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Human
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Infant, Newborn
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Male
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Pregnancy