Journal/Magazine Articles
Permanent URI for this collectionhttp://repository.kln.ac.lk/handle/123456789/13
This collection contains original research articles, review articles and case reports published in local and international peer reviewed journals by the staff members of the Faculty of Medicine
Browse
2 results
Search Results
Item Risk of stillbirth at term and optimum timing of delivery in uncomplicated south Asian singleton pregnancies(Sri Lanka Medical Association, 2014) Dias, T.; Kumarasiri, S.; Wanigasekara, R.; Cooper, D.; Batuwitage, C.; Jayasinghe, L.; Padeniya, T.OBJECTIVES: Aims of this study were to compare the perinatal mortality rate and the prospective risk of stillbirth for each given gestational age and to ascertain whether it is safe to continue the pregnancy beyond 40 weeks of gestational age and induce labour at 41 weeks in low risk singleton pregnancies. METHODS: This was a retrospective study. The perinatal mortality and prospective risk were calculated per 1000 total births and 1000 on going pregnancies respectively in well dated singleton pregnancies. 38+0 to 39+6 gestational age was taken as the reference. RESULTS: A total of 12,595 deliveries after 28 weeks of gestation were included. The risk of stillbirth at 38+0 to 39+6 weeks was 1.43 (95% CI, 0.9 to 2.4) per 1000 on going pregnancies. The perinatal mortality rate at 38+0 to 39+6 weeks was 2.9 (95% CI, 1.9 to 4.5) per 1000 total births. The perinatal mortality rate decreased throughout gestation and it was lowest at 40+0 - 41+6. In contrast, risk of stillbirth increased with advancing gestation and peaked at 40+0 - 41+6 (2.57, 95% CI, 1.4 to 4.7). However, risk of stillbirth at 40+0 - 41+6 was not statistically different from 38+0 to 39+6 (OR 1.79, 95% CI, 0.80 to 3.98). To prevent one stillbirth, 886 pregnancies should be induced at 38+0 to 39+6. CONCLUSIONS: Risk of stillbirth is more informative than perinatal mortality at term. Frequent antenatal fetal surveillance should be adopted towardsterm in order to identify high risk pregnancies. Elective delivery before 40 weeks in low risk pregnancies is not justifiedItem Sri Lankan fetal birthweight charts:validation of global reference for fetal weight and birthweight percentiles(Sri Lanka Medical Association, 2013) Shanmugaraja, Y.; Kumarasiri, S. G.; Wahalawatte, S. L.; Wanigasekara, R. V.; Begam, P.; Jayasinghe, P. K.; Padeniya, T.; Dias, T.INTRODUCTION: Small for gestational age (SGA) is defined as birthweight below the tenth centile at a particular gestational week. Birthweight centiles for different populations are varied. Generic reference for fetal weight and birthweight that could be adapted to local populations was recently described. The purpose of this study was to validate the reference for birthweights adapted to the local population. METHODS: This was a prospective validation study done between January 2012 and July 2012 in well dated pregnancies at General Hospital, Ampara. Observed frequencies of birthweights of 5th, 10th, 50th, 90th and 95th percentiles for Hadlock formula, World Health Organization (WHO)global survey data for Sri Lanka and India were calculated. The expected frequencies for each birthweight centile of our study were compared with observed frequencies. RESULTS: A total of 411 patients were recruited and 207 delivered at 40 weeks (40+0-40+6). The mean birth-weight (SD) at 40 weeks of gestation was 3140g (432g). Hadlock formula and WHO reference data for India overestimate and underestimate most of the birthweights respectively. WHO generic reference adapted to Sri Lanka fitted well with our data. The mean birthweight of our population is similar, and the adapted reference range would identify most of the small fetuses correctly. It would also identify almost all the babies with weight above the 90th centile. CONCLUSIONS: The findings of the study show that the observed distribution of birthweight fitted well with the reference range derived from the WHO global reference range adapted to Sri Lankan population. WHO reference charts can be used effectively in Sri Lankan population