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5059

Hyperemesis gravidarum and early new-born outcomes

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Last updated: 03 Jan 2025

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Abstract

Background: Hyperemesis gravidarum (HG) represents a more severe degree of nausea and vomiting of pregnancy and is potentially lethal if not treated well. HG is defined as persisting nausea and vomiting leading to dehydration, weight loss and nutritional deficiencies and was reported to be associated with poor perinatal outcome.
Aim: To evaluate the effect of HG on the perinatal outcome.
Patients and Methods: The study was conducted at Suez Canal University Hospitals, Ismailia at outpatient clinic from October 2015 to January 2017. 132 patients were randomly selected with evidence of HG, the study group, and 137 women with no evidence of HG were the control group. Preterm birth, low birth weight, Apgar score Results: The Apgar score at 5 minutes of birth was the only outcome showed significant difference between the both groups (P value <0.001) while other mentioned perinatal outcomes were of insignificant difference. Also such significant difference in the Apgar score was more related to the maternal weight gain.
Conclusion: Apgar score at 5 minutes of birth could be affected by HG if associated with poor maternal weight gain

DOI

10.21608/ebwhj.2017.5059

Keywords

Hyperemesis gravidarum, nausea and vomiting in pregnancy, pregnancy outcome

Volume

7

Article Issue

3

Related Issue

851

Issue Date

2017-08-01

Receive Date

2017-06-18

Publish Date

2017-08-01

Page Start

91

Page End

99

Print ISSN

2090-7265

Online ISSN

2090-7257

Link

https://ebwhj.journals.ekb.eg/article_5059.html

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https://ebwhj.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=5059

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Original Article

Type Code

366

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Evidence Based Women's Health Journal

Publication Link

https://ebwhj.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Hyperemesis gravidarum and early new-born outcomes

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Type

Article

Created At

22 Jan 2023