2 resultados para Low-Pr-Fluid
Resumo:
A infecção pós-natal a citomegalovírus (CMV) nos recém-nascidos pré termos (RNPT) ou muito baixo peso (MBP) pode cursar com doença grave. Para avaliar a transmissão do CMV no leite materno, no RNPT ou MBP, a infecção e o prognóstico a longo prazo, efectuamos uma pesquisa online no motor de busca OVID (consultando a Pubmed, Medline e a Medscape) de Janeiro de 1982 a Agosto de 2011. Os estudos que incluíam a infecção congénita foram excluídos. Incluímos cerca de 30 estudos para análise. A taxa de infecção materna assintomática é elevada (média 81%) e a transmissão do CMV no LM varia entre 66-97,2% das mães CMV-IgC positivas com subsequente positividade nos RN entre 5.7 – 58.6%. Sendo as taxas de infecção sintomática (0-34,5%) e/ou de doença grave (0-13,8%) muito variáveis de estudo para estudo. A longo prazo pode cursar com perturbações do neurodesenvolvimento e morbilidade importantes, sem compromisso auditivo. Em relação à inactivação do CMV pode-se optar por pasteurizar ou congelar o LM, com eficácia/benefício/custo variável. As recomendações actuais são variáveis e pouco directivas, deixando nalguns casos ao critério individual.
Resumo:
Objective:We aimed to identify the cut-off for risk of pre-eclampsia (PE) in Portuguese population by applying the first trimester prediction model from Fetal Medicine Foundation (FMF) in a prospective enrolled cohort of low risk pregnant women. Population and methods: A prospective cohort of low risk singleton pregnancies underwent routine first-trimester scree - ning from 2011 through 2013. Maternal characteristics, blood pressure, uterine artery Doppler, levels of pregnancy-associated plasma protein-A (PAPP-A) and free b-human chorionic gonadotropin were evaluated. The prediction of PE in first trimester was calculated through software Astraia, the outcome obtained from medical records and the cutoff value was subse quently calculated. Results:Of the 273 enrolled patients, 7 (2.6%) developed PE. In first trimester women who developed PE presented higher uterine arteries resistance, represented by higher values of lowest and mean uterine pulsatility index, p <0.005. There was no statistical significance among the remaining maternal characteristics, body mass index, blood pressure and PAPP-A. Using the FMF first trimester PE algorithm, an ideal cut-off of 0.045 (1/22) would correctly detect 71% women who developed PE for a 12% false positive rate and a likelihood ratio of 12.98 (area under the curve: 0.69; confidence interval 95%: 0.39-0.99). By applying the reported cutoff to our cohort, we would obtain 71.4% true positives, 88.3% true negatives, 11.4% false positives and 28.6% false negatives. Conclusion: By applying a first trimester PE prediction model to low risk pregnancies derived from a Portuguese population, a significant proportion of patients would have been predicted as high risk. New larger studies are required to confirm the present findings.