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Umbilical Cord Unmeasured Anions and Tissue Acid Levels According to Stewart’s Method in Term Newborn Infants and the Impact of Delivery Mode on these parameters

Authors :
Deniz Anuk-i̇nce
Ayşe Ecevi̇t
Servet Özki̇raz
Abdullah Kurt
Hande Gülcan
Aylin Tarcan
Source :
Journal of Contemporary Medicine, Vol 10, Iss 4, Pp 1-6 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Rabia Yılmaz, 2020.

Abstract

Aim: To determine the reference values of strong ion difference (SID), effective SID (SIDe), unmeasured anions (UMA), tissue acids (TA), lactate and Chloride-Sodium (Cl-Na) ratio of umbilical cord blood, and to evaluate the impact of delivery mode on these parameters. Methods: This prospective study was performed on healthy term newborn infants that had normal progress throughout the first and second stages of labor during normal spontaneous delivery (NSD) and cesarean section (C/S). Immediately after birth, 1ml and 2 ml of umbilical venous cord blood samples were obtained for blood gas analysis and blood chemistry respectively. The Cl-Na ratio, anion gap (AG), albumin corrected AG (AGCorr), SID, SIDe, UMA and TA were calculated in NSD and C/S groups.. Results: A total of 181 healthy newborn infants were included the study. Fifty-one infants were delivered by NSD and 130 infants by C/S. The pH and PCO2 values were similar in both groups. The mode of delivery had a significant impact on the umbilical cord AG, AGCorr, SID, lactate, UMA, and TA levels. All these values were significantly higher in NSD than C/S group. Conclusion: Umbilical cord blood gas analysis is a common practice to evaluate fetal status at delivery. The calculation of blood gas parameters in perinatal problems according to Stewart’s method may lead further understanding how perinatal conditions of the mother influence the fetus and newborn infant.

Details

Language :
English, Turkish
ISSN :
26677180
Volume :
10
Issue :
4
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Journal of Contemporary Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.5315647ade2447a1b7590b2b054ee00d
Document Type :
article