Perinatal and Maternal Outcomes According to the Accurate Term Antepartum Ultrasound Estimation of Extreme Fetal Weights
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Mozas Moreno, Juan; Olmedo Requena, María Rocío; Amezcua Prieto, María Del Carmen; Jiménez Moleón, José JuanEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Fetal growth Fetal weight Sonographic estimated fetal weight Accuracy Fetal macrosomia Fetal microsomia Large for gestational age Small for gestational age
Date
2023-04-20Referencia bibliográfica
Mozas-Moreno, J.; Sánchez-Fernández, M.; González-Mesa, E.; Olmedo-Requena, R.; Amezcua-Prieto, C.; Jiménez-Moleón, J.J. Perinatal and Maternal Outcomes According to the Accurate Term Antepartum Ultrasound Estimation of Extreme Fetal Weights. J. Clin. Med. 2023, 12, 2995. [https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12082995]
Résumé
(1) Background: The accuracy of ultrasound estimation of fetal weight (EFW) at term
may be useful in addressing obstetric complications since birth weight (BW) is a parameter that
represents an important prognostic factor for perinatal and maternal morbidity. (2) Methods: In a
retrospective cohort study of 2156 women with a singleton pregnancy, it is verified whether or not
perinatal and maternal morbidity differs between extreme BWs estimated at term by ultrasound
within the seven days prior to birth with Accurate EFW (difference < 10% between EFW and BW) and
those with Non-Accurate EFW (difference ≥ 10% between EFW and BW). (3) Results: Significantly
worse perinatal outcomes (according to different variables such as higher rate of arterial pH at birth
< 7.20, higher rate of 1-min Apgar < 7, higher rate of 5-min Apgar < 7, higher grade of neonatal
resuscitation and need for admission to the neonatal care unit) were found for extreme BW estimated
by antepartum ultrasounds with Non-Accurate EFW compared with those with Accurate EFW. This
was the case when extreme BWs were compared according to percentile distribution by sex and
gestational age following the national reference growth charts (small for gestational age and large for
gestational age), and when they were compared according to weight range (low birth weight and
high birth weight). (4) Conclusions: Clinicians should make a greater effort when performing EFW
by ultrasound at term in cases of suspected extreme fetal weights, and need to take an increasingly
prudent approach to its management.
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