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Assessment of stillbirth risk and associated risk factors in a tertiary hospital
25
Citations
13
References
2002
Year
FertilityIntrauterine Growth RestrictionGynecologyStillbirth RiskStillbirth RateHigh-risk PregnancyHospital MedicineDetermine Antenatal FactorsObstetricsPrematurityPublic HealthInfertilityMaternal ComplicationGestational AgeMaternal HealthTertiary HospitalMaternal-fetal MedicineRisk FactorsEpidemiologyBirth OutcomesPerinatal EpidemiologyAbortionPatient SafetyPediatricsPregnancyPreterm BirthFetal ComplicationMedicine
We aimed to calculate the stillbirth rate at each gestation and also determine antenatal factors, which may be associated with unexplained stillbirth in a large UK teaching hospital. This was a retrospective study of all the stillbirths between January 1995 and October 1998. There were 27 170 births at > or =24 weeks, gestation during the study period. Of these 161 were stillbirths giving a stillbirth rate of 5.9/1000; 149 (92.5%) were antepartum. Eighty-two (50.9%) were unexplained. The "risk" of unexplained stillbirth per 1000 ongoing pregnancies was 0.3 at 24-25 weeks, fell steadily to 0.07 at 30-31 weeks and then rose to a peak of 1.16 at 40-41 weeks. About half (49.2%) of the pregnancies that ended in unexplained stillbirths had a normal antenatal course with no associated factors. Associated factors in the unexplained stillbirth group were identified in 50.8% of cases. The most common was intrauterine growth restriction, identified in 41.5% of cases. The "risk" of stillbirth increases at term. No significant antenatal associated factor, detection of which would aid prevention, could be identified in the majority of cases.
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