Relation of cervical length at 22-24 weeks of gestation to demographic characteristics and obstetric history

Preterm delivery is the main cause of neonatal death and ultrasonographic cervical assessment has been shown to be more accurate than digital examination in recognizing a short cervix. This is a cross-sectional study, involving 1131 women at 22-24 weeks of pregnancy, designed to determine the distribution of cervical length and to examine which variables of demographic characteristics and obstetric history increase the risk of a short cervix (15 mm or less). The distribution of maternal demographic and obstetric history characteristics among patients with cervical length £15 mm was analyzed and compared to the findings for the general population. Risk ratios (RR) between subgroups were generated from this comparison. Median cervical length was 37 mm and in 1.5% of cases it was 15 mm or less. The proportion of women with a short cervix (<=15 mm) was significantly higher among patients with a low body mass index (RR = 3.5) and in those with previous fetal losses between 16-23 weeks (RR = 33.1) or spontaneous preterm deliveries between 24-32 weeks (RR = 14.1). We suggest that transvaginal sonographic measurement of cervical length be performed as part of a routine midtrimester ultrasound evaluation. There are specific variables of demographic characteristics and obstetric history which increase the risk of detecting a short cervix at 22-24 weeks.

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Main Authors: Palma-Dias,R.S., Fonseca,M.M., Stein,N.R., Schmidt,A.P., Magalhães,J.A.
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Associação Brasileira de Divulgação Científica 2004
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0100-879X2004000500016
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spelling oai:scielo:S0100-879X20040005000162004-04-22Relation of cervical length at 22-24 weeks of gestation to demographic characteristics and obstetric historyPalma-Dias,R.S.Fonseca,M.M.Stein,N.R.Schmidt,A.P.Magalhães,J.A. Cervical length Preterm delivery screening Transvaginal sonography Perinatal medicine Preterm delivery is the main cause of neonatal death and ultrasonographic cervical assessment has been shown to be more accurate than digital examination in recognizing a short cervix. This is a cross-sectional study, involving 1131 women at 22-24 weeks of pregnancy, designed to determine the distribution of cervical length and to examine which variables of demographic characteristics and obstetric history increase the risk of a short cervix (15 mm or less). The distribution of maternal demographic and obstetric history characteristics among patients with cervical length £15 mm was analyzed and compared to the findings for the general population. Risk ratios (RR) between subgroups were generated from this comparison. Median cervical length was 37 mm and in 1.5% of cases it was 15 mm or less. The proportion of women with a short cervix (<=15 mm) was significantly higher among patients with a low body mass index (RR = 3.5) and in those with previous fetal losses between 16-23 weeks (RR = 33.1) or spontaneous preterm deliveries between 24-32 weeks (RR = 14.1). We suggest that transvaginal sonographic measurement of cervical length be performed as part of a routine midtrimester ultrasound evaluation. There are specific variables of demographic characteristics and obstetric history which increase the risk of detecting a short cervix at 22-24 weeks.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessAssociação Brasileira de Divulgação CientíficaBrazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research v.37 n.5 20042004-05-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0100-879X2004000500016en10.1590/S0100-879X2004000500016
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libraryname SciELO
language English
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author Palma-Dias,R.S.
Fonseca,M.M.
Stein,N.R.
Schmidt,A.P.
Magalhães,J.A.
spellingShingle Palma-Dias,R.S.
Fonseca,M.M.
Stein,N.R.
Schmidt,A.P.
Magalhães,J.A.
Relation of cervical length at 22-24 weeks of gestation to demographic characteristics and obstetric history
author_facet Palma-Dias,R.S.
Fonseca,M.M.
Stein,N.R.
Schmidt,A.P.
Magalhães,J.A.
author_sort Palma-Dias,R.S.
title Relation of cervical length at 22-24 weeks of gestation to demographic characteristics and obstetric history
title_short Relation of cervical length at 22-24 weeks of gestation to demographic characteristics and obstetric history
title_full Relation of cervical length at 22-24 weeks of gestation to demographic characteristics and obstetric history
title_fullStr Relation of cervical length at 22-24 weeks of gestation to demographic characteristics and obstetric history
title_full_unstemmed Relation of cervical length at 22-24 weeks of gestation to demographic characteristics and obstetric history
title_sort relation of cervical length at 22-24 weeks of gestation to demographic characteristics and obstetric history
description Preterm delivery is the main cause of neonatal death and ultrasonographic cervical assessment has been shown to be more accurate than digital examination in recognizing a short cervix. This is a cross-sectional study, involving 1131 women at 22-24 weeks of pregnancy, designed to determine the distribution of cervical length and to examine which variables of demographic characteristics and obstetric history increase the risk of a short cervix (15 mm or less). The distribution of maternal demographic and obstetric history characteristics among patients with cervical length £15 mm was analyzed and compared to the findings for the general population. Risk ratios (RR) between subgroups were generated from this comparison. Median cervical length was 37 mm and in 1.5% of cases it was 15 mm or less. The proportion of women with a short cervix (<=15 mm) was significantly higher among patients with a low body mass index (RR = 3.5) and in those with previous fetal losses between 16-23 weeks (RR = 33.1) or spontaneous preterm deliveries between 24-32 weeks (RR = 14.1). We suggest that transvaginal sonographic measurement of cervical length be performed as part of a routine midtrimester ultrasound evaluation. There are specific variables of demographic characteristics and obstetric history which increase the risk of detecting a short cervix at 22-24 weeks.
publisher Associação Brasileira de Divulgação Científica
publishDate 2004
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0100-879X2004000500016
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