国产热热热精品,亚洲视频久久】日韩,三级婷婷在线久久,99人妻精品视频,精品九热人人肉肉在线,AV东京热一区二区,91po在线视频观看,久久激情宗合,青青草黄色手机视频

Science and Health

Researchers find accurate way to predict miscarriage

(Agencies)
Updated: 2011-07-05 19:55
Large Medium Small

LONDON - British fertility researchers have developed an accurate way to predict which pregnancies are most likely to miscarry and say it could help doctors target treatment at women who really need it.

In a study presented at European Society for Human Reproduction and Embryology conference in Stockholm, researchers found six factors with the greatest impact on miscarriage risk -- a history of subfertility, levels of progesterone and of the pregnancy hormone human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG), foetus length, the extent of bleeding, and the baby's gestational age.

Individually, these factors were unable to predict accurately the risk of miscarriage, but when the researchers combined two of them -- bleeding and hCG levels -- to create a "Pregnancy Viability Index" (PVI), they found this was a consistently reliable predictor of miscarriage.

"This research has, for the first time, offered us a robust tool to begin to attempt to rescue pregnancies threatening to miscarry when currently all we can do is fold our hands and hope for the best," said Kaltum Adam of Britain's St Mary's Hospital in Manchester, who led the study.

Around 20 percent of all pregnancies threaten to miscarry and about up to 20 percent of those do. Until now, doctors had no way to predict which threatened miscarriages would result in the end of the pregnancy and so could not target rescue attempts at the right women or offer them counselling.

In Britain, around 250,000 miscarriages occur every year, causing significant psychological distress to affected women and their families.

"This has led to wasteful and potentially harmful interventions, including unnecessary blood tests, ultrasound scans, hospital admissions for bed rest, sexual abstinence, low dose aspirin and progesterone supplementation," Adam said.

Between 2009 and 2010, Adam's team followed 112 women with threatened miscarriages who were between six and 10 weeks pregnant. During the five weeks of the study the women had ultrasound scans, weekly charting of pain and bleeding and weekly tests to check the levels of progesterone and hCG.

After analysing data on the outcomes of these pregnancies, Adam found there were six most important miscarriage factors, and from there the researchers developed their PVI scale.

"The PVI was able to accurately predict the pregnancy outcome in 94 percent of women who had ongoing pregnancies, and also predicted the outcome in 77 percent of women whose pregnancy ended in miscarriage," Adam said in a statement.

She said the PVI could now enable doctors to avoid unnecessary treatment in around 80 percent of women with threatened miscarriage, who currently often have repeated blood tests and ultrasound scans to monitor the pregnancy. ?

"The use of the PVI will negate these in the vast majority of these women, as we will be able to reassure them of a high likelihood of pregnancy continuation and that there is little additional value in doing further testing," Adam said.

She said the PVI would also allow doctors to focus on the remaining 20 percent of risky pregnancies that do go on to miscarry, hopefully giving them a better understanding of the what goes wrong and how they might be rescued.

 

分享按鈕
长子县| 凤凰县| 彭州市| 揭东县| 资溪县| 梅河口市| 佳木斯市| 景宁| 拉萨市| 荔浦县| 徐州市| 马公市| 中江县| 密山市| 开远市| 福安市| 军事| 蓝山县| 伊金霍洛旗| 金门县| 噶尔县| 舒兰市| 黑水县| 宁城县| 上蔡县| 托里县| 辉南县| 新蔡县| 日土县| 沙河市| 平和县| 化州市| 宝鸡市| 武强县| 福鼎市| 涟源市| 华阴市| 历史| 金寨县| 鹤峰县| 万盛区|