The incidence of preterm labor and specific risk factors.
Publication/Presentation Date
7-1-1990
Abstract
A retrospective review of patients at high risk for preterm delivery because of twin gestation, uterine malformation, incompetent cervix, or previous preterm delivery was carried out to assess the rates of preterm labor and spontaneous preterm birth. Among the 119 patients with multifetal gestation, 46% had preterm labor and 36% delivered before 37 weeks' gestation. In the 58 patients with an anomalous uterus, the rate of preterm labor was 19%, and 14% had early deliveries. Of those with incompetent cervices (115), one-fourth had preterm labor and 17% had an early birth. When a history of one or more preterm deliveries was present, the preterm labor rate ranged from 41-68%, with an early delivery rate of 30-47%. Prophylactic tocolytic therapy did not prolong gestations significantly. Maternal smoking did not have an adverse effect on the incidence of preterm labor except in twin pregnancies, for which early delivery was more likely. The percentages for preterm delivery are slightly lower than those found in the literature; this may be attributable to improvement in preterm birth prevention efforts including patient education, more frequent examinations, home uterine activity monitoring, and daily nursing contact.
Volume
76
Issue
1 Suppl
First Page
85
Last Page
85
ISSN
0029-7844
Published In/Presented At
Roberts, W. E., Morrison, J. C., Hamer, C., & Wiser, W. L. (1990). The incidence of preterm labor and specific risk factors. Obstetrics and gynecology, 76(1 Suppl), 85S–89S.
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
2359586
Department(s)
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology
Document Type
Article