1. Incidence of adhesions and maternal and neonatal morbidity after repeat cesarean section.
- Author
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Arlier, Sefa, Seyfettinoğlu, Sevtap, Yilmaz, EsraSaygili, Nazik, Hakan, Adıgüzel, Cevdet, Eskimez, Eda, Hürriyetoğlu, Şerif, yücel, Oğuz, Seyfettinoğlu, Sevtap, Adıgüzel, Cevdet, Hürriyetoğlu, Şerif, and Yücel, Oğuz
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CESAREAN section , *NEONATAL diseases , *PREGNANCY complications , *SURGICAL emergencies , *HISTORY of medicine - Abstract
Purpose Of Investigation: We investigated the effect of repeat cesarean sections (CSs) and intra-abdominal adhesions on neonatal and maternal morbidity.Materials and Methods: We analyzed intra-abdominal adhesions of 672 patients.Results: Among the patients, 173, 206, 151, and 142 underwent CS for the first, second, third, and fourth time or more, respectively. There were adhesions in 393 (58.5 %) patients. Among first CSs, there were no adhesions, the rate of maternal morbidity [Morales et al. (Am J Obstet Gynecol 196(5):461, 2007)] was 26 %, and the rate of neonatal morbidity (NM) was 35 %. Among women who have history of two CSs, the adhesion rate was 66.3 %, the adhesion score was 2.05, MM was 14 %, and NM was 21 %. Among third CSs, these values were 82.1, 2.82, 23, and 14 %, respectively. Among women who have history of four or more CSs, these values were 92.2, 4.72, 31.7, and 18 %, respectively. Adhesion sites and dense fibrous adhesions increased parallel to the number of subsequent CSs. Increased adhesion score was associated with 1.175-fold higher odds of NM and 1.29-fold higher odds of MM. The rate of NM was eightfold higher in emergency-delivered newborns (emergency: 39.4, 40 %; elective: 4.9 %). MM was 20 and 26 % for elective and emergency CSs, respectively.Conclusions: Emergency operations and adhesions increased complications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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