Purpose: In early-onset preeclampsia, each additional day of pregnancy prolongation reduces offspring infant mortality about 9%. We evaluated if maternal stress at admission to hospital for early-onset preeclampsia predicted admission-to-delivery intervals in days.
Methods: This prospective, longitudinal cohort-study involved 15 singleton pregnancies with a diagnosis of preeclampsia before 34 weeks gestation with intended expectant management.
This Dutch multicenter case-controlled study investigated whether cortisol concentrations and psychosocial stress during pregnancy differed between women with early-onset preeclampsia, late-onset preeclampsia, and uncomplicated pregnancies. Cortisol concentrations were analyzed in three hair segments representing the preconception period, first, and second trimester of pregnancy. Cortisol trajectories differed, with early-onset preeclampsia showing steeper increases in cortisol and higher cortisol concentrations during the second trimester.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Matern Fetal Neonatal Med
December 2017
Objective: To evaluate neonatal outcomes of pregnancies complicated by early-onset preeclampsia (PE) and compare these outcomes to those of gestational age matched neonates born to mothers whose pregnancy was not complicated by early-onset PE.
Methods: We analyzed the outcome in 97 neonates born to mothers with early-onset PE (24-32 weeks amenorrhea at diagnosis) and compared it to that of 680 gestational age-matched neonates born between 25-36 weeks due to other etiologies and admitted to the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) of a tertiary referral hospital in the Netherlands. We used Chi-square test, Wilcoxon test, and logistic regression analyses.