Premature Labour -
Introduction
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Obstet Gynecol. 1992 Mar;79(3):351-7.
The association of occult amniotic fluid infection with gestational age
and neonatal outcome among women in preterm labor.
Watts DH, Krohn MA, Hillier SL, Eschenbach DA.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Washington,
Seattle.
To evaluate the relationships between gestational age, neonatal outcome,
and amniotic fluid (AF) bacteria, we obtained AF from women with intact
membranes in idiopathic preterm labor. Positive cultures were obtained
from 20 (19%) of 105 women. The frequency of positive cultures was
inversely related to gestational age: 23-26 weeks, nine of 20; 27-30
weeks, four of 24; and 31-34 weeks, seven of 61 (chi2 for trend, P less
than .001). Fusobacterium nucleatum, Bacteroides ureolyticus, and
Ureaplasma urealyticum were the most common isolates. Facultative and
anaerobic bacteria were more commonly isolated from women at less than
30 weeks' gestation, and Ureaplasma urealyticum was commonly isolated at
greater than 30 weeks' gestation. Forty percent of the patients
identified as having positive AF facultative and anaerobic cultures by
the research laboratory had negative cultures in the clinical
laboratory. Clinical characteristics and maternal white blood cell count
and differential did not differ between women with and without positive
cultures. Elevated C-reactive protein levels and a positive AF Gram
stain were the two most sensitive and specific methods to predict
positive AF cultures. Women with positive cultures delivered a median of
1.0 day after enrollment, compared with 28.5 days for women with
negative cultures. The median gestational age at delivery for women with
positive cultures was 27.5 weeks, and the median birth weight was 866 g.
Positive AF cultures were associated with respiratory distress syndrome,
bronchopulmonary dysplasia, and neonatal death. If occult AF infection
among women in preterm labor is a treatable cause of preterm birth, then
treatment could markedly reduce both perinatal morbidity and mortality.