keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31977782/telehealth-interventions-to-improve-obstetric-and-gynecologic-health-outcomes-a-systematic-review
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nathaniel DeNicola, Daniel Grossman, Kathryn Marko, Sarita Sonalkar, Yvonne S Butler Tobah, Nihar Ganju, Catherine T Witkop, Jillian T Henderson, Jessica L Butler, Curtis Lowery
OBJECTIVE: To systematically review the effectiveness of telehealth interventions for improving obstetric and gynecologic health outcomes. DATA SOURCES: We conducted a comprehensive search for primary literature in ClinicalTrials.gov, Cochrane Library, Cochrane Collaboration Registry of Controlled Trials, EMBASE, PubMed, and MEDLINE. METHODS OF STUDY SELECTION: Qualifying primary studies had a comparison group, were conducted in countries ranked very high on the United Nations Human Development Index, published in English, and evaluated obstetric and gynecologic health outcomes...
February 2020: Obstetrics and Gynecology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28646507/influences-of-placental-growth-factor-on-mouse-retinal-vascular-development
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Vanessa R Kay, Chandrakant Tayade, Peter Carmeliet, B Anne Croy
BACKGROUND: Placental growth factor (PGF) is important for wound-healing and vascular collaterogenesis. PGF deficiency is associated with preeclampsia, a hypertensive disease of human pregnancy. Offspring born to preeclamptic mothers display cognitive impairments and brain vascular and neurostructural deviations. Low PGF production during development may contribute to alterations in offspring cerebrovascular beds. Retina is a readily accessible part of the central nervous system with a well-described pattern of vascular development in mice...
September 2017: Developmental Dynamics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26915924/gynecologic-and-obstetric-consequences-of-obesity-in-adolescent-girls
#23
REVIEW
Leticia Elizondo-Montemayor, Claudia Hernández-Escobar, Eduardo Lara-Torre, Bianca Nieblas, Merith Gómez-Carmona
In the past few decades, there has been an overwhelming increase in childhood and adolescent obesity worldwide. Besides the well recognized cardiometabolic complications and other physical conditions associated with obesity, during adolescence, it causes psychological and social distress in a period of life that is already sensitive for a girl. This in turn increases their risk of low self-esteem and depression. Furthermore, obesity diminishes health-related quality of life and years of life. Overweight and obese teenagers are more likely to have gynecologic and obstetric complications, during adolescence and also later in life...
April 2017: Journal of Pediatric and Adolescent Gynecology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26104639/pre-eclampsia-a-disease-of-an-individual-couple
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gustaaf Albert Dekker
Preeclampsia still ranks as one of obstetrics major problems. Clinicians typically encounter preeclampsia as maternal disease with variable degrees of fetal involvement. More and more the unique immunogenetic maternal-paternal relationship is appreciated, and as such also the specific 'genetic conflict' that is characteristic of haemochorial placentation. From that perspective preeclampsia can also been seen as a disease of an individual couple with primarily maternal and fetal manifestations. Factors that are unique to a specific couple would include the length and type of sexual relationship, the maternal (decidual natural killer cells) acceptation of the invading cytotrophoblast (paternal HLA-C), and seminal levels of transforming growth factor-b and probably other cytokines...
July 2014: Pregnancy Hypertension
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25918481/perinatal-outcomes-in-hiv-positive-pregnant-women-with-concomitant-sexually-transmitted-infections
#25
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Erin Burnett, Tammy L Loucks, Michael Lindsay
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate whether HIV infected pregnant women with concomitant sexually transmitted infection (STIs) are at increased risk of adverse perinatal and neonatal outcomes. METHODS: We conducted a cohort study of HIV positive women who delivered at an inner-city hospital in Atlanta, Georgia, from 2003 to 2013. Demographics, presence of concomitant STIs, prenatal care information, and maternal and neonatal outcomes were collected. The outcomes examined were the association of the presence of concomitant STIs on the risk of preterm birth (PTB), postpartum hemorrhage, chorioamnionitis, preeclampsia, intrauterine growth restriction, small for gestational age, low Apgar scores, and neonatal intensive care admission...
2015: Infectious Diseases in Obstetrics and Gynecology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25833255/sexual-dimorphism-in-mir-210-expression-and-mitochondrial-dysfunction-in-the-placenta-with-maternal-obesity
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
S Muralimanoharan, C Guo, L Myatt, A Maloyan
BACKGROUND: Maternal obesity is a major problem in obstetrics, and the placenta is involved in obesity-related complications via its roles at the maternal-fetal interface. We have recently shown a causative role for micro(mi)RNA-210, a so called 'hypoxamir' regulated by HIF-1α, in mitochondrial dysfunction in placentas from women with preeclampsia. We also reported mitochondrial dysfunction in placentas with maternal obesity. Here we hypothesized that expression of miR-210 is dysregulated in the placentas with obesity...
August 2015: International Journal of Obesity
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25015807/effect-of-preeclampsia-on-placental-function-influence-of-sexual-dimorphism-microrna-s-and-mitochondria
#27
REVIEW
Leslie Myatt, Sribalasubashini Muralimanoharan, Alina Maloyan
In pregnancy fetal growth and development occur in a sexually dimorphic manner. Male and female fetuses respond differently to the intrauterine environment with males disproportionately suffering from perinatal morbidity and mortality. We have demonstrated placental dysfunction and sexually dimorphic responses in pregnancies complicated by severe preeclampsia. Production of cytokines and apoptosis in the male placenta is heightened relative to that of the female placenta. We also find increased expression and stabilization and a sexual dimorphism in expression of the transcription factor HIF-1α, but a defect in binding to the hypoxia response element with corresponding reduced expression of HIF-1α target genes including VEGF and Glut-1...
2014: Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24011785/cumulative-exposure-to-paternal-seminal-fluid-prior-to-conception-and-subsequent-risk-of-preeclampsia
#28
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Audrey F Saftlas, Linda Rubenstein, Kaitlin Prater, Karisa K Harland, Elizabeth Field, Elizabeth W Triche
A growing body of literature suggests that prior and prolonged exposure to paternal antigens in seminal fluid induces maternal tolerance to the allogeneic fetus, protecting it from rejection and facilitating successful implantation and placentation. In this case-control study of nulliparous women, we test the hypothesis that increased exposure to paternal seminal fluid via the vaginal or oral route will confer a reduced risk of preeclampsia. Preeclampsia cases (n=258) and normotensive controls (n=182) were selected from live births to Iowa women over the period August 2002 to April 2005...
March 2014: Journal of Reproductive Immunology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20144511/-liver-transplantation-and-pregnancy
#29
REVIEW
A-C Goarin, L Homer
Management during their sexual life of patients with a liver transplantation is a more or less common situation depending centers. Based on literature review, a focus on management of recipient women was conducted, from contraception to pregnancy, describing the complications related to the status of transplant recipient, but also those that may be related to immunosuppressive agents. If fertility and access to contraception are only slightly modified by graft, complications related to graft or immunosuppressive drugs can affect the pregnancy...
November 2010: Journal de Gynécologie, Obstétrique et Biologie de la Reproduction
https://read.qxmd.com/read/19679359/duration-of-sexual-relationship-and-its-effect-on-preeclampsia-and-small-for-gestational-age-perinatal-outcome
#30
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Ee Min Kho, Lesley M E McCowan, Robyn A North, Claire T Roberts, Eliza Chan, Michael A Black, Rennae S Taylor, Gustaaf A Dekker
The aim of this study was to determine if women with preeclampsia or delivering small for gestational age (SGA) babies are more likely to have a short duration of sexual relationship compared with those who have uncomplicated pregnancies. In a prospective cohort study, 2507 nulliparous women with singleton pregnancies were interviewed at 15+/-1 weeks gestation about the duration of their sexual relationship with the biological father. Short duration of sexual relationship (< or =6 months, < or =3 months, or first intercourse) was compared between women with preeclampsia (N=131) or SGA babies (N=263) and those with uncomplicated pregnancies (N=1462)...
October 2009: Journal of Reproductive Immunology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/19439728/melatonin-and-reproduction-revisited
#31
REVIEW
Russel J Reiter, Dun-Xian Tan, Lucien C Manchester, Sergio D Paredes, Juan C Mayo, Rosa M Sainz
This brief review summarizes new findings related to the reported beneficial effects of melatonin on reproductive physiology beyond its now well-known role in determining the sexual status in both long-day and short-day seasonally breeding mammals. Of particular note are those reproductive processes that have been shown to benefit from the ability of melatonin to function in the reduction of oxidative stress. In the few species that have been tested, brightly colored secondary sexual characteristics that serve as a sexual attractant reportedly are enhanced by melatonin administration...
September 2009: Biology of Reproduction
https://read.qxmd.com/read/18302520/maternal-infant-and-delivery-factors-associated-with-neonatal-thyroid-hormone-status
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Julie Herbstman, Benjamin J Apelberg, Frank R Witter, Susan Panny, Lynn R Goldman
BACKGROUND: Thyroid function is dynamic during the perinatal period with many factors potentially influencing maternal, fetal and neonatal TSH and thyroid hormone levels. We sought to identify the impact of numerous maternal, fetal and delivery attributes on thyroid parameters in newborns. METHODS: This was a cross sectional study of 300 newborns. Detailed information was obtained from medical records and multiple characteristics from the record were tested as predictors of cord blood serum total T4, free T4 and TSH and infant T4 levels from the Maryland newborn screening program...
January 2008: Thyroid: Official Journal of the American Thyroid Association
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17358037/risk-for-gastroschisis-in-primigravidity-length-of-sexual-cohabitation-and-change-in-paternity
#33
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Monica Rittler, Eduardo E Castilla, Christina Chambers, Jorge S Lopez-Camelo
BACKGROUND: Maternal epidemiologic similarities between gastroschisis and preeclampsia have led to the objective of evaluating the risk for gastroschisis related to primigravidity, change in paternity, and length of cohabitation, considered as risk factors for preeclampsia. METHODS: The subjects were 288 newborns with isolated gastroschisis and 576 normal controls, matched by maternal age. They were ascertained in the Estudio Colaborativo Latino Americano de Malformaciones Congenitas hospital network of 10 South American countries between 1982 and 2005...
June 2007: Birth Defects Research. Part A, Clinical and Molecular Teratology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16642631/-the-male-s-role-in-the-etiology-of-preeclampsia
#34
REVIEW
Guy Gutman, Ohad Hilly, Joseph B Lessing, Michael J Kupferminc, David Pauzner
Preeclampsia is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in mothers, fetuses, and neonates worldwide, with 5%-10% of human births being affected. The cause is still uncertain, and many controversies exist concerning its management. Preeclampsia-eclampsia is due to the failure of extra-villous cytotrophoblast to invade the maternal uterine spiral arteries to a sufficient depth, inducing poor vascular exchanges between the mother and the placenta. This physiological endovascular trophoblast invasion represents a remarkable immunological placental-maternal interaction...
April 2006: Harefuah
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16180801/-shbg-new-possibilities-of-diagnostic-use-in-obstetrics-and-gynecology
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
H Fingerová, M Procházka, P Petrová
Recent literature review is suggesting the need to renew the traditional concept of SHBG as only a transport protein. The new role of SHBG relates to the evidence of its specific receptor on the cell membrane and an alternative signal pathway for sexual steroids. This review points to the importance of simultaneous measurements of SHBG along with determinations of the total sexual steroid concentration and informs of some new areas where SHBG can be used in laboratory diagnostics. In obstetrics the low levels of SHBG in the first half of pregnancy were reported as a promising early risk marker of the later development of preeclampsia...
September 2005: Ceská Gynekologie
https://read.qxmd.com/read/12915659/sexual-dimorphism-in-the-growth-hormone-and-insulin-like-growth-factor-axis-at-birth
#36
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Michael P P Geary, P Jane Pringle, Charles H Rodeck, John C P Kingdom, Peter C Hindmarsh
In rodents and humans there is a sexually dimorphic pattern of GH secretion that influences the serum concentration of IGF-I. Pattern differences can be identified in children, but it is not known how early this difference is established. We studied the plasma concentrations of IGF-I, IGF-II, IGF-binding protein-3 (BP-3), and GH in cord blood taken from the offspring of 1650 singleton Caucasian pregnancies born at term and related these values to birth weight, length, and head circumference. Pregnancies complicated by preterm delivery, antepartum hemorrhage, pregnancy-induced hypertension, preeclampsia, or gestational diabetes and where cigarette smoking continued were excluded, resulting in a cohort of 987...
August 2003: Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism
https://read.qxmd.com/read/12896815/preeclampsia-and-human-reproduction-an-essay-of-a-long-term-reflection
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Pierre-Yves Robillard, Thomas C Hulsey, Gustaaf A Dekker, Gérard Chaouat
Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (HDP: pregnancy-induced hypertension, preeclampsia, eclampsia) affect approximately 10% of human births. Women are at increased risk for HDP during their first conception; and/or when the conception is with a new partner (new paternity); when conception occurs very shortly after the beginning of their sexual relationship. A primary cause of preeclampsia is the defect of the normal human-specific deep endovascular invasion of trophoblast, which is a consequence of the nutritional demands of growth of the human fetal brain...
August 2003: Journal of Reproductive Immunology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/12385843/the-partner-s-role-in-the-etiology-of-preeclampsia
#38
REVIEW
Gus Dekker
The etiology of preeclampsia is often considered to be purely maternal, i.e. maternal constitutional factors that impair maternal cardiovascular/endothelial mechanisms normally required to cope with the specific pregnancy demands, being primarily a generalised inflammatory response and a hyperdynamic circulation. Recent data strongly indicate an important role for the male partner in the causation of this common pregnancy disorder. The aim of this review is to discuss the relevant literature and to explain how paternal, relational and sexual factors play an important role in the etiology of preeclampsia...
October 2002: Journal of Reproductive Immunology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/12314369/incidence-of-pre-eclampsia-in-first-full-term-pregnancies-preceded-by-abortion
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
I Beck
The incidence of preeclampsia in 1st term pregnancies was studied in relation to whether or not they were preceded by pregnancies which ended in abortion--spontaneous or induced. 220 patients with previous abortion were studied along with 2 sets of controls, 1 with no previous abortion or pregnancy and 1 with a 2nd term pregnancy. The incidence of preeclampsia was significantly lower than there had been a previous induced abortion but this was not as low as in cases with a 2nd term pregnancy. This finding may be interpreted as supporting the idea that pregnancy exerts a protective effect against the risk of preeclampsia which may have an immunological basis...
October 1985: Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/12015513/risk-of-adverse-pregnancy-outcomes-in-young-adolescent-parturients-in-an-inner-city-hospital
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chineta R Eure, Michael K Lindsay, William L Graves
OBJECTIVE: Our purpose was to determine the relationship between adolescence and pregnancy-related outcomes. STUDY DESIGN: A retrospective cohort study was conducted in a population of adolescents delivered in a large inner-city hospital. The study population consisted of 14,718 adolescents and 11,830 nonadolescent controls. Pregnancy outcomes were compared in young adolescents (n = 2930) and mature adolescents (n = 11,788) versus controls. RESULTS: Adolescents were significantly more likely than controls to be African American, single, diagnosed with a sexually transmitted disease during pregnancy, and reside with others (P <...
May 2002: American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology
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