PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Women have up to a fourfold increase in risk of stillbirth following a previous stillbirth

Stillbirth is still a major public health concern despite rates falling across high income countries

2015-06-25
(Press-News.org) Women who have experienced a stillbirth have up to a fourfold increased risk of stillbirth in a second pregnancy compared to those who had an initial live birth, finds a new meta-analysis published in The BMJ this week.

Stillbirth rates have declined across most of Europe, but the UK still has a major public health problem. Ranked 33rd out of 35 for stillbirth rates among European countries, the UK recorded 3,286 stillborn babies in 2013.

"Stillbirth is one of the most common adverse obstetric outcomes and a traumatic experience for parents," explain Sohinee Bhattacharya and colleagues from the University of Aberdeen, Scotland. "Couples who have experienced a stillbirth need to understand why it happened and want to know the risk for future pregnancies."

But there has not been sufficient information for the clinical management or to improve prevention of this traumatic outcome, they say.

So they undertook systematic review and meta-analysis to examine the link between stillbirth in an initial pregnancy and risk of stillbirth in a subsequent pregnancy.

They analysed thirteen cohort and 3 case-control studies from high-income countries including Australia, Scotland, the US, Denmark, Israel, the Netherlands, Norway and Sweden.

The definition of stillbirth was fetal death at more than 20 weeks' gestation or a birth weight of at least 400g.

Data was collected for 3,412,079 women. Of these, 3,387,538 (99.3%) women had a previous live birth and 24,541 (0.7%) women had a stillbirth in an initial pregnancy.

Stillbirths occurred in the subsequent pregnancy for 14,283 women: 606 of 24,541 (2.5%) in women with a history of stillbirth and 13,677 of 3,387,538 (0.4%) in women with no history.

Twelve studies assessed the risk of stillbirth in second pregnancies. Analyses showed that women who had a stillbirth in an initial pregnancy had a nearly fivefold increased risk of stillbirth in a second pregnancy. This risk is higher than stillbirth linked with medical conditions such as diabetes or hypertension.

After adjusting for confounding factors such as maternal age, maternal smoking and level of deprivation, the increased risk was up to fourfold higher.

Risks following an unexplained stillbirth may not be increased because there are few studies and the evidence remains inadequate, explain the authors.

Pre-pregnancy counselling services should be provided to women who had a stillbirth, they urge, as well as advice on changing these lifestyle factors such as smoking and obesity that are both linked to an increased risk of stillbirth.

Pregnancies should be closely monitored, and antenatal interventions and care be offered at the first sign of increased risk of distress or danger, they add.

In a linked editorial, experts from St Mary's Hospital echo calls for additional care in next pregnancy, and for more research on unexplained stillbirths, which can account for around 20% of stillbirths. In addition, they stress the importance of an improved international classification system to determine causes of death, especially as these can be quite complex, so that interventions can be adequately targeted.

INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

UNAIDS-Lancet Commission: World must drastically accelerate AIDS efforts or face more

2015-06-25
Countries most affected by HIV must focus on stopping new HIV infections and expanding access to antiretroviral treatment or risk the epidemic rebounding, urges a major new report from the UNAIDS and Lancet Commission. "We must face hard truths--if the current rate of new HIV infections continues, merely sustaining the major efforts we already have in place will not be enough to stop deaths from AIDS increasing within five years in many countries," said Professor Peter Piot, Director of the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, Co-Chair of the Commission, and ...

Needle exchanges can prevent more HIV outbreaks like one in Indiana

2015-06-25
Congress needs to immediately lift the ban on federal funding for needle exchange programs to counter the threat of HIV outbreaks among injection drug users like the one that has seen an alarming number of new cases erupt in a single rural Indiana county. So say Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Professor Chris Beyrer, MD, MPH, and Steffanie A. Strathdee, PhD, director of the Institute of Global Health at the University of California-San Diego, in a commentary published online June 24 in The New England Journal of Medicine. "There are going to be more ...

Nearly half of Hispanics unaware they have high cholesterol; less than a third treated

2015-06-24
DALLAS, June 24, 2015 -- Nearly half of Hispanic adults were unaware they have high cholesterol, and less than a third receive any kind of cholesterol treatment, in a new study in Journal of the American Heart Association. Hispanics are one of the fastest growing ethnic groups in America, with 52 million among the U.S. population, yet their awareness and management of high cholesterol lags behind other ethnic groups. Educating Hispanics/Latinos about the importance of maintaining healthy cholesterol levels could have a significant public health impact on reducing the ...

Patient outcomes could improve by preparing nursing homes for health information exchange

2015-06-24
COLUMBIA, Mo. - When older adults transfer between nursing homes and hospitals, inefficient and unclear communication between the organizations can hinder patient care. Now, a team of MU researchers is working to improve patients' health outcomes by increasing efficient, secure communication between nursing homes and hospitals using an electronic communication system called a health information exchange (HIE). "The exchange of accurate, complete and timely information between hospitals and nursing homes can be complicated when older adults transfer from one place to another," ...

Factors released following stem cell transplantation therapeutically impact serious burns

2015-06-24
Putnam Valley, N.Y. (June 24, 2015) - Cell transplantation researchers have successfully used bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) to treat a variety of diseases and conditions. Now, using injections of MSCs, a research team in Brazil has successfully treated laboratory rats modeled with severe burns. They found that the MSCs accelerated healing, enhanced local blood supply, affected the immune system in a positive way, secreted beneficial growth factors with anti-inflammatory properties, and ultimately provided higher survival rates than in control animals ...

In ERs, UTIs and STIs in women misdiagnosed, even mixed up nearly half the time

2015-06-24
Urinary tract and sexually transmitted infections in women are misdiagnosed by emergency departments nearly half the time, according to a paper in the Journal of Clinical Microbiology, a publication of the American Society for Microbiology. These misdiagnoses result in overuse of antibiotics, and increased antibiotic resistance, according to Michelle Hecker, MD, an assistant professor in the Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, MetroHealth Medical Center, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, and her collaborators. "Less than half the women ...

NASA's Hubble sees a 'behemoth' bleeding atmosphere around a warm exoplanet

NASAs Hubble sees a behemoth bleeding atmosphere around a warm exoplanet
2015-06-24
Astronomers using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope have discovered an immense cloud of hydrogen dubbed "The Behemoth" bleeding from a planet orbiting a nearby star. The enormous, comet-like feature is about 50 times the size of the parent star. The hydrogen is evaporating from a warm, Neptune-sized planet, due to extreme radiation from the star. This phenomenon has never been seen around an exoplanet so small. It may offer clues to how other planets with hydrogen-enveloped atmospheres could have their outer layers evaporated by their parent star, leaving behind solid, rocky ...

Cystic fibrosis deadlier for Hispanic than non-Hispanic patients, Stanford study finds

2015-06-24
Cystic fibrosis is more deadly for Hispanic than non-Hispanic patients, a disparity that is not explained by differences in their access to health care, according to a new study from the Stanford University School of Medicine. The study, published online June 18 in Chest, tracked more than 1,700 California residents with cystic fibrosis. Between 1991 and 2010, Hispanic CF patients were almost three times as likely to die as non-Hispanic CF patients, the study found. The gap in survival existed in spite of the fact that both groups visited CF specialty clinics equally ...

Rainbow of glowing corals discovered in depths of the Red Sea

Rainbow of glowing corals discovered in depths of the Red Sea
2015-06-24
Glowing corals that display a surprising array of colours have been discovered in the deep water reefs of the Red Sea by scientists from the University of Southampton, UK, Tel Aviv University and the Interuniversity Institute for Marine Sciences (IUI), Israel, together with an international team of researchers. The researchers, whose findings have been published online today in research journal PLOS ONE, hope that some of the coral pigments could be developed into new imaging tools for medical applications. The team studied corals at depths of more than 50 metres and ...

Got acne? Lay off the B12

2015-06-24
Vitamin B12 tweaks how genes behave in the facial bacteria of some people who normally enjoy clear skin. The activity changes of the facial bacteria promote inflammation and lead to pimples. By shedding light on one mechanism behind B12's role in acne, the UCLA finding may identify drug targets that lead to new treatments for acne. Huiying Li, an assistant professor of molecular and medical pharmacology at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, and Dr. Noah Craft, a dermatologist at LA BioMed at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, are available for interviews. Science ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Urban wild bees act as “microbial sensors” of city health.

New study finds where you live affects recovery after a hip fracture

Forecasting the impact of fully automated vehicle adoption on US road traffic injuries

Alcohol-related hospitalizations from 2016 to 2022

Semaglutide and hospitalizations in patients with obesity and established cardiovascular disease

Researchers ‘listen in’ to embryo-mother interactions during implantation using a culture system replicating the womb lining

How changing your diet could help save the world

How to make AI truly scalable and reliable for real-time traffic assignment?

Beyond fragmented markets: A new framework for efficient and stable ride-pooling

Can shape priors make road perception more reliable for autonomous driving?

AI tracks nearly 100 years of aging research, revealing key trends and gaps

Innovative techniques enable Italy’s first imaging of individual trapped atoms

KIER successfully develops Korea-made “calibration thermoelectric module” for measuring thermoelectric device performance

Diversifying US Midwest farming for stability and resilience

Emphasizing immigrants’ deservingness shifts attitudes

Japanese eels, climate change, and river temperature

Pusan National University researchers discover faster, smarter heat treatment for lightweight magnesium metals

China’s 2024 Gastroenterology Report: marked progress in endoscopy quality and disease management

Pusan National University researchers uncover scalable method for ultrahigh-resolution quantum dot displays

Researchers use robotics to find potential new antibiotic among hundreds of metal complexes

Gut bacteria changes at the earliest stages of inflammatory bowel disease

Scientists develop new way to “listen in” on the brain’s hidden language

Brain research: “Pulse generators” grow and shrink as memories are formed

For teens, any cannabis use may have impact on emotional health, academic performance

School meals could unlock major gains for human and planetary health

Menopause hormone therapy does not appear to impact dementia risk

Signature patterns of brain activity may help predict recovery from traumatic brain injury

Dresden study uncovers new key mechanism in cancer cells

New species are now being discovered faster than ever before, study suggests

Cannabis-based products show limited short-term benefit for chronic pain, with increased risk of adverse effects

[Press-News.org] Women have up to a fourfold increase in risk of stillbirth following a previous stillbirth
Stillbirth is still a major public health concern despite rates falling across high income countries