(Press-News.org) This press release is available in French.
Women who were born premature are more likely to have pregnancy complications than women who weren't, according to data analyzed by a team lead by Dr. Anne Monique Nuyt, a neonatal specialist and researcher at the Sainte-Justine Mother and Child University Hospital Center and University of Montreal. This is the first study to clearly show the impact of preterm birth (i.e. before 37 weeks of gestation) itself on pregnancy risks. "We knew that to be born with a low birth weight could be associated with increased risk of pregnancy complications, but with this study we isolated the "born preterm factor" and show that being born premature has a major impact on pregnancy complications," Nuyt said. The results of Nuyt's studies were published online by the Canadian Medical Association Journal on September 24, 2012.
They examined the data from all women born preterm between 1976 and 1995 and who had delivered at least one infant between 1987 and 2008. "We took all women born preterm and selected twice as many "at-term" women as representative controls for this study," Nuyt explained. There were 7,405 women in the born preterm group during the study period. "The findings show that just over one in ten pregnancies involves complications in mothers who were carried to full term. However, this figure rises to one in five for women who were born before 32 weeks of gestation." The researchers were able to undertake their study with high quality data and precise information as all births, with weight and gestational age, and all hospital diagnosis and interventions that take place in Quebec are recorded in universal databases that can be used to generate health statistics. The researchers were able refine their query to include women who were born between 24 and 42 weeks gestation and were also able to correct their statistics to take into account other health conditions and social factors that may influence pregnancy-related complications.
Scientists have known for some time that women whose weight was low at birth have a higher risk of health issues during pregnancy, including gestational hypertension, gestational diabetes and preeclampsia. However, it was unclear whether being born preterm alone had an impact. This research establishes that, independently of weight at birth (i.e. whether too small or normal for gestational age), baby girls born preterm show a significant increase in their risk of developing pregnancy complications, and that the risk increases the more premature the woman was born.
As the rate of survival of preterm babies has increased significantly over the past 30 years, it is important for researchers to improve the understanding of the health risks for this increasingly large percentage of the population. "Seven per cent of young adults in Quebec were born prematurely," Nuyt said. "The impact of preterm births on obstetric care should be taken into account by professionals providing care directly to patients and by managers allocating resources within the health care system."
###
Notes
This work was funded by a Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) operating grant (no. MCH-97584). The researchers received funding from the Fonds de recherche du Québec – Santé, the CIHR, and the Fonds de recherche du Québec – Société et culture. Sainte-Justine Mother and Child University Hospital and the University of Montreal are known officially as Centre hospitalier universitaire Sainte-Justine and Université de Montréal, respectively.
Pregnancy complications up to twice higher in women born preterm
Low-weight at birth is an additional but independent risk factor
2012-09-24
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Research shows ants share decision-making, lessen vulnerability to 'information overload'
2012-09-24
TEMPE, Ariz. – Scientists at Arizona State University have discovered that ants utilize a strategy to handle "information overload." Temnothorax rugatulus ants, commonly found living in rock crevices in the Southwest, place the burden of making complicated decisions on the backs of the entire colony, rather than on an individual ant.
In a study published in the early, online version of scientific journal Current Biology, Stephen Pratt, an associate professor in ASU's School of Life Sciences in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and Takao Sasaki, a graduate student ...
Researchers at Harvard's Wyss Institute engineer novel DNA barcode
2012-09-24
VIDEO:
DNA origami is a process that can be used to self-assemble shapes that are of nanometer dimensions -- 100 nanometers is about 1,000 times shorter than the width of an...
Click here for more information.
BOSTON, September 24, 2012—Much like the checkout clerk uses a machine that scans the barcodes on packages to identify what customers bought at the store, scientists use powerful microscopes and their own kinds of barcodes to help them identify various parts of a cell, ...
Study uncovers mechanism by which tumor suppressor MIG6 triggers cell suicide
2012-09-24
New York, NY and Uppsala, Sweden, September 24, 2012 – Death plays a big role in keeping things alive. Consider the tightly orchestrated suicide of cells--a phenomenon essential to everything from shaping an embryo to keeping it free of cancer later in life. When cells refuse to die, and instead multiply uncontrollably, they become what we call tumors. An intricate circuitry of biochemical reactions inside cells coordinates their self-sacrifice. Tracing that circuitry is, naturally, an important part of cancer research.
In a major contribution to that effort Dr. Ingvar ...
New study shows PTSD symptoms reduced in combat-exposed military via integrative medicine
2012-09-24
SAN DIEGO (Sept. 24, 2012) – Healing touch combined with guided imagery (HT+GI) provides significant clinical reductions in post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms for combat-exposed active duty military, according to a study released in the September issue of Military Medicine.
The report finds that patients receiving these complementary medicine interventions showed significant improvement in quality of life, as well as reduced depression and cynicism, compared to soldiers receiving treatment as usual alone.
The study, led by the Scripps Center for Integrative ...
Pacific Islanders have high obesity, smoking rates
2012-09-24
ANN ARBOR, Mich.—In the first study to detail the health of Pacific Islanders living in the United States, University of Michigan researchers have found alarmingly high rates of obesity and smoking.
The preliminary findings are being presented today (Sept. 24) at a conference in Los Angeles on health disparities among Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders.
"Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders are the second fastest growing minority population in the U.S.," said Sela Panapasa, a researcher at the U-M Institute for Social Research and principal investigator of the ...
Vitamin D deficiency increases risk of heart disease
2012-09-24
New research from the University of Copenhagen and Copenhagen University Hospital shows that low levels of vitamin D are associated with a markedly higher risk of heart attack and early death. The study involved more than 10,000 Danes and has been published in the well-reputed American journal Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis and Vascular Biology.
Vitamin D deficiency has traditionally been linked with poor bone health. However, the results from several population studies indicate that a low level of this important vitamin may also be linked to a higher risk of ischemic heart ...
Climate is changing the Great Barrier Reef
2012-09-24
Satellite measurement of sea surface temperatures has yielded clear evidence of major changes taking place in the waters of Australia's Great Barrier Reef over the past 25 years, marine scientists have found.
The changes have big implications for the future management of the GBR and its marine protected areas say Dr Natalie Ban and Professor Bob Pressey of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies and James Cook University, who led the study with Dr Scarla Weeks from the University of Queensland.
"When we looked back at satellite data collected since 1985, ...
World Heart Federation says heart health starts earlier than you think
2012-09-24
A new multi-national survey reveals the extent of misconceptions about when is the right time to start taking action to prevent cardiovascular disease (CVD). In a four-country survey sample of 4,000 adults, 49 per cent answered age 30 years or older when asked at what age they believe people should start to take action about their heart health to prevent conditions such as heart disease and stroke. The fact is that CVD can affect people of all ages and population groups, and the risk begins early in life through unhealthy diets, lack of physical activity and exposure to ...
Cellular eavesdropping made easy
2012-09-24
It is much harder to keep up with a conversation in a crowded bar than in a quiet little café, but scientists wishing to eavesdrop on cells can now do so over the laboratory equivalent of a noisy room. A new method devised by scientists at the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) in collaboration with the German Cancer Research Centre (DKFZ), both in Heidelberg, Germany, provides a new approach for studying the proteins cells release to communicate with each other, react to changes, or even to help them move. Published online today in Nature Biotechnology, the work ...
New IVF breakthrough
2012-09-24
Researchers at the University of Gothenburg have discovered that a chemical can trigger the maturation of small eggs to healthy, mature eggs, a process that could give more women the chance of successful IVF treatment in the future. The results have been published in the revered journal PloS ONE.
Women and girls treated for cancer with radiotherapy and chemotherapy are often unable to have children as their eggs die as a result of the treatment.
Although it is now possible to freeze eggs and even embryos, this is not an option for girls who have yet to reach puberty. ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Stand up to cancer adds new expertise to scientific advisory committee
‘You don’t just throw them in a box.’ Archaeologists, Indigenous scholars call on museums to better care for animal remains
Can AI tell us if those Zoom calls are flowing smoothly? New study gives a thumbs up
The Mount Sinai Hospital ranked among world’s best in Newsweek/Statista rankings
Research shows humans have a long way to go in understanding a dog’s emotions
Discovery: The great whale pee funnel
Team of computer engineers develops AI tool to make genetic research more comprehensive
Are volcanoes behind the oxygen we breathe?
The two faces of liquid water
The Biodiversity Data Journal launches its own data portal on GBIF
Do firefighters face a higher brain cancer risk associated with gene mutations caused by chemical exposure?
Less than half of parents think they have accurate information about bird flu
Common approaches for assessing business impact on biodiversity are powerful, but often insufficient for strategy design
Can a joke make science more trustworthy?
Hiring strategies
Growing consumption of the American eel may lead to it being critically endangered like its European counterpart
KIST develops high-performance sensor based on two-dimensional semiconductor
New study links sleep debt and night shifts to increased infection risk among nurses
Megalodon’s body size and form uncover why certain aquatic vertebrates can achieve gigantism
A longer, sleeker super predator: Megalodon’s true form
Walking, moving more may lower risk of cardiovascular death for women with cancer history
Intracortical neural interfaces: Advancing technologies for freely moving animals
Post-LLM era: New horizons for AI with knowledge, collaboration, and co-evolution
“Sloshing” from celestial collisions solves mystery of how galactic clusters stay hot
Children poisoned by the synthetic opioid, fentanyl, has risen in the U.S. – eight years of national data shows
USC researchers observe mice may have a form of first aid
VUMC to develop AI technology for therapeutic antibody discovery
Unlocking the hidden proteome: The role of coding circular RNA in cancer
Advancing lung cancer treatment: Understanding the differences between LUAD and LUSC
Study reveals widening heart disease disparities in the US
[Press-News.org] Pregnancy complications up to twice higher in women born pretermLow-weight at birth is an additional but independent risk factor