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INTRAUTERINE GROWTH RESTRICTION |
Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Biol. 1989 Dec;33(3):199-208.
Umbilical flow waveforms versus fetal biophysical profile in hypertensive
pregnancies.
Ferrazzi E, Bellotti M, Vegni C, Barbera A, Della Peruta S, Ferro B,
Agostoni G, Pardi G.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Milan, Ospedale San
Paolo, Italy.
The pulsatility index (PI) of the umbilical arteries was measured in 40
hypertensive pregnancies. Doppler-velocimetric data were kept unknown to the
clinical staff. An abnormal PI was found in 79% of cases in which an
abnormal fetal growth in utero had been diagnosed by ultrasonographic
measurements. Serial PI findings showed worsening figures in most of the
cases with an abnormal fetal growth, irrespective of the last absolute
value. Amniotic fluid estimation and PI data were significantly correlated.
PI values were markedly abnormal in fetuses with non-reactive heart-rate
tracings. A high sensitivity and an optimal specificity were found for
umbilical PI versus the diagnosis of fetal growth retardation made by the
coexistence of different biophysical criteria. However, false normal results
may occur. 62% of the newborns weighed below the 5th percentile. The
sensitivity of abnormal PI values to detect these light fetuses resulted to
be only 67%. However the prevalence of neonatal morbidity in fetuses with
abnormal PI values was 74%, while morbidity occurred only in 14% of cases
with normal PI values. In hypertensive pregnancies, this simple velocimetric
parameter proved to correlate with abnormal biophysical monitoring and
complicated neonatal outcomes.
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