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Intrapartum Detection of a Maerosomie Fetus: Clinieal Versus 8 Sonographic Models

63

Citations

14

References

1995

Year

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to determine whether clinical or sonographic models have 1) the highest accuracy in differentiating newborns with birth-weights > or = 4,000 g (macrosomia) versus < or = 3,999 g, and 2) among macrosomics which method of predicting birth-weight has the lowest percentage error. Prospectively, 602 consecutive parturients at term had a clinical estimate of birth-weight followed by sonographic measurement of fetal parts. The sonographic prediction of birth-weight was derived using 8 different models that utilize either 1 measurement or a combination of 2 to 4 parameters. The incidence of macrosomia was 11.1% (67 of 602). Analysis of ROC curves indicated that clinical predictions (w = 0.85) were significantly better than 4 of the 8 sonographic models. The mean standardized absolute error among macrosomic newborns is significantly lower when predictions are derived clinically (99 +/- 70 g/kg) than using 1 or 2 fetal parts. Sonographic assessment of birth-weight is not significantly more accurate in the detection of a macrosomic fetus than clinical predictions.

References

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