Title of article :
Epidemiologic predictors of cesarean section in nulliparous patients at low risk
Author/Authors :
Bernard L. Harlow، نويسنده , , Frederic D. Frigoletto، نويسنده , , Daniel W. Cramer، نويسنده , , Joni K. Evans، نويسنده , , Raymond P. Bain، نويسنده , , Bernard Ewigman، نويسنده , , Donald McNellis، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1995
Pages :
7
From page :
156
To page :
162
Abstract :
OBJECTIVES: We sought to determine whether certain maternal and fetal characteristics influenced the risk of maternal- and fetal-indicated cesarean sections in pregnant women at low risk for adverse perinatal outcomes. STUDY DESIGN: From a cohort of 6393 low-risk nulliparous patients maternal and fetal indicated cesarean section rates with 95% confidence intervals were calculated and stratified by demographic, anthropometric, and clinical lests and measurements. The strongest risk factors were modeled by means of multiple logistic regression. RESULTS: Few risk factors distinguished maternal from fetal characteristics preceding cesarean delivery, Maternal age was associated with increased cesarean section risk in the tallest group of women only, and cesarean section rates decreased with increasing height. Increased with higher prepregnancy weights, and was highest in women carrying male fetuses. Higher first prenatal visit diastolic blood pressure, increasing numbers of nonstress tests, ≥ 2+ prenatal urine protein, late sonograms, geographic region, and practice type were statistically significant risk factors as well. Interestingly, results of prenatal visit tests and measurements contributed less to the prevalence of cesarean section than did age, fetal sex, and anthropometric parameters. However, the generalizability of these resultsis limited to low-risk (predominantly white) populations. CONCLUSIONS: Of the risk factors we were able to assess, a large proportion of the incidence of cesarean section in this population of nulliperous patients at low risk was attributable to age, sex of fetus, and anthropometric patient profiles.
Keywords :
Anthropometry , risk factors , Cesarean section , cohort studies
Journal title :
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology
Serial Year :
1995
Journal title :
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology
Record number :
638509
Link To Document :
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