Objectives: To assess the effect of the twin-to-twin delivery interval on the umbilical cord blood gas status and the neonatal outcome of the second twin following vaginal delivery.
Patients And Methods: Retrospective study of twin deliveries at or beyond 34 weeks of gestation over a period of five years. The correlation between the twin-to-twin delivery interval, and the umbilical arterial blood gas parameters of the second twin, including pH, PO(2), PCO(2), HCO(3-) and base excess, was studied. A second analysis was performed after exclusion of non-vertex presentation, need for general anesthesia, growth restriction and weight difference between the twin>30%.
Results: Two hundred and thirty-nine patients were studied. The mean twin-to-twin delivery interval was 11.3+/-6.4 minutes (between 6 and 14 minutes in 56.1% of cases). The second twin had more Apgar score<7 at 1 minute (P<0.02) and more arterial ombilical pH<7.20 (P<0.01) than the first twin. Over 15 minutes, the mean arterial pH was lower (P<0.01) and the number of arterial pH<7.20 increased (P<0.03). In contrast, the mean Apgar score and the rate of neonatal transfer did not differ significantly. There were significant negative correlations between arterial pH, base excess and bicarbonates and the twin-to-twin delivery interval (P<0.05). Similar results were found in the homogenised population. The reduction in the second twin arterial pH was expressed as pH=7.282-0.003 x time.
Discussion And Conclusion: Umbilical cord arterial blood gas parameters deteriorate with increasing twin-to-twin delivery interval. Our results suggest that this interval should be less than 15 minutes, but obstetrician should adapt to every clinic situation.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gyobfe.2007.08.010 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!