201. Decision-to-Incision Times and Maternal and Infant Outcomes
- Author
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Bloom, Steven L., Leveno, Kenneth J., Spong, Catherine Y., Gilbert, Sharon, Hauth, John C., Landon, Mark B., Varner, Michael W., Moawad, Atef H., Caritis, Steve N., Harper, Margaret, Wapner, Ronald J., Sorokin, Yoram, Miodovnik, Menachem, O’Sullivan, Mary J., Sibai, Baha M., Langer, Oded, and Gabbe, Steven G.
- Abstract
The goal of this observational study was to relate decision-to-incision intervals to maternal and fetal outcomes in women having emergency cesarean delivery at 13 university-based hospitals making up the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Maternal–Fetal Medicine Units Network. Women having primary cesarean delivery over a 24-month period were prospectively enlisted. Indications for emergency section included umbilical cord prolapse, placenta abruption, placenta previa with hemorrhage, a nonreassuring fetal heart rate (FHR) pattern, and uterine rupture. Among 11,481 primary cesarean deliveries were 2808 performed for emergency indications. Approximately two thirds of these procedures (1814 or 65%) began within 30 minutes of the decision to operate. The most common indication was a nonreassuring FHR pattern.
- Published
- 2006
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