Preterm Birth in Nulliparous Women

The aim of this study was to assess the frequency and risk factors of Preterm birth (PB), depending on the mechanism of their occurrence in nulliparous women with singleton pregnancies. Methods and Results: This retrospective, population-based cohort study included 327 nulliparous women who gave b...

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Main Authors: Roziya K. Kuzibaeva, Valery G. Volkov
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Medical Research and Development Corporation 2021-03-01
Series:International Journal of Biomedicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ijbm.org/articles/i41/ijbm_11(1)_oa7.pdf
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spelling doaj-23d3c63341d84fd58bbd3182554486b62021-03-06T21:37:18ZengInternational Medical Research and Development CorporationInternational Journal of Biomedicine2158-05102158-05292021-03-01111394110.21103/Article11(1)_OA7Preterm Birth in Nulliparous WomenRoziya K. Kuzibaeva0Valery G. Volkov1Tula State University; Tula, the Russian FederationTula State University; Tula, the Russian FederationThe aim of this study was to assess the frequency and risk factors of Preterm birth (PB), depending on the mechanism of their occurrence in nulliparous women with singleton pregnancies. Methods and Results: This retrospective, population-based cohort study included 327 nulliparous women who gave birth at 22-37 weeks gestation. Three groups of women were formed: Group 1 included 32 women with spontaneous PB, Group 2 included 115 women with preterm premature rupture of membranes (PROM), and Group 3 included 180 women with medical indication for PB. The average age of the mothers for the whole group was 29.3±6.0 years. Depending on the gestational age, PB in 22-27 weeks occurred in 23(7.4%) cases, 28-33 weeks in 110(33.6%) cases, and 34-37 weeks in 194(59%) cases. In our cohort, the frequency of PB resulting from spontaneous PB, PROM or medical indication for PB was 9.8%, 35.2%, and 55%, respectively. The main risk factors for PB were preeclampsia of varying severity, placental abruption, placental insufficiency, and fetal growth retardation. The highest number of pregnancy complications was found in Group 3. Conclusion: PB in nulliparous women occurs more often in the period of 34-37 weeks, the main reason being medical indications (maternal or fetal). Attempts to analyze, interpret, and reduce the level of PB should be considered separately, depending on the mechanism of their occurrence.http://ijbm.org/articles/i41/ijbm_11(1)_oa7.pdfpreterm birthnulliparityrisk factorpreterm premature rupture of membranespreeclampsia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Roziya K. Kuzibaeva
Valery G. Volkov
spellingShingle Roziya K. Kuzibaeva
Valery G. Volkov
Preterm Birth in Nulliparous Women
International Journal of Biomedicine
preterm birth
nulliparity
risk factor
preterm premature rupture of membranes
preeclampsia
author_facet Roziya K. Kuzibaeva
Valery G. Volkov
author_sort Roziya K. Kuzibaeva
title Preterm Birth in Nulliparous Women
title_short Preterm Birth in Nulliparous Women
title_full Preterm Birth in Nulliparous Women
title_fullStr Preterm Birth in Nulliparous Women
title_full_unstemmed Preterm Birth in Nulliparous Women
title_sort preterm birth in nulliparous women
publisher International Medical Research and Development Corporation
series International Journal of Biomedicine
issn 2158-0510
2158-0529
publishDate 2021-03-01
description The aim of this study was to assess the frequency and risk factors of Preterm birth (PB), depending on the mechanism of their occurrence in nulliparous women with singleton pregnancies. Methods and Results: This retrospective, population-based cohort study included 327 nulliparous women who gave birth at 22-37 weeks gestation. Three groups of women were formed: Group 1 included 32 women with spontaneous PB, Group 2 included 115 women with preterm premature rupture of membranes (PROM), and Group 3 included 180 women with medical indication for PB. The average age of the mothers for the whole group was 29.3±6.0 years. Depending on the gestational age, PB in 22-27 weeks occurred in 23(7.4%) cases, 28-33 weeks in 110(33.6%) cases, and 34-37 weeks in 194(59%) cases. In our cohort, the frequency of PB resulting from spontaneous PB, PROM or medical indication for PB was 9.8%, 35.2%, and 55%, respectively. The main risk factors for PB were preeclampsia of varying severity, placental abruption, placental insufficiency, and fetal growth retardation. The highest number of pregnancy complications was found in Group 3. Conclusion: PB in nulliparous women occurs more often in the period of 34-37 weeks, the main reason being medical indications (maternal or fetal). Attempts to analyze, interpret, and reduce the level of PB should be considered separately, depending on the mechanism of their occurrence.
topic preterm birth
nulliparity
risk factor
preterm premature rupture of membranes
preeclampsia
url http://ijbm.org/articles/i41/ijbm_11(1)_oa7.pdf
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