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Publication Date:
February 2010
ISSN:
1619-3997
DOI:
10.1515/jpm.2010.029

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Journal of Perinatal Medicine

Official Journal of the World Association of Perinatal Medicine

Editor-in-Chief: Dudenhausen, Joachim W.

Editorial Board Member: / Bancalari, Eduardo / Greenough, Anne / Genc, Mehmet R. / Chervenak, Frank A. / Aslam, Muhammad / Bergmann, Renate L. / Bernardes, J.F. / Bevilacqua, G. / Blickstein, Isaac / Brezinka, Christoph / Cabero Roura, Luis / Carbonell-Estrany, Xavier / Carrera, Jose M. / D`Addario, Vincenzo / Dimitrou, G. / Foulon, Walter / Grunebaum, G. E. / Harding, Jane / Hentschel, Roland / Kawabata, Ichiro / Keirse, M.J.M.C. / Kurjak M.D., Asim / Levene, Malcolm / Lockwood, Charles J. / Marsal, Karel / Nishida, Hiroshi / Papp, Zoltán / Makatsariya, Alexander / Pejaver, Ranjan Kumar / Pooh, Ritsuko K. / Saugstad, Ola D. / Schenker, Joseph G. / Sen, Cihat / Geijn, Herman P. / Vetter, Klaus / Young, Bruce K. / Zimmermann, Roland / Köpcke, W.

6 Issues per year

IMPACT FACTOR 2011: 1.702
5-year IMPACT FACTOR: 1.779
Rank 36 out of 79 in category Obstretics and Gynecology and 45 out of 113 in category Pediatrics in the 2011 Thomson Reuters Journal Citation Report/Science Edition

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Effect of maternal clinical chorioamnionitis on neonatal morbidity in very-low birthweight infants: a case-control study

Francesc Botet1 / Josep Figueras1 / Xavier Carbonell-Estrany1 / Gemma Arca1 / the Castrillo Study Group2

1Neonatology Service, Hospital Clínic de Barcelona, Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain

2Castrillo Study Group: M. José Párraga Quiles and Juana M. Guzmán, Hospital Reina Sofía, Córdoba; Ana Alarcón Allen, Hospital Sant Joan de Déu, Esplugues de Llobregat, Barcelona; Carmen González Armengod, Hospital Clínico, Valladolid; Ana Remesal Escalero, Hospital Universitario de Salamanca, Salamanca; María J. García García, Hospital San Pedro de Alcántara, Complejo Hospitalario de Cáceres, Cáceres; Emilio Álvaro Iglesias, Hospital de León, León; Roser Porta, Institut Universitari Dexeus, Barcelona; Rafael Reparaz, Complejo Hospitalario Juan Canalejo, A Coruña; Eduardo Narbona, Hospital Clínico, Granada; Belén Colomer, Hospital Central de Asturias, Oviedo; and José Martínez Orgado, Fundación Hospital Alcorcón, Madrid, Spain

Corresponding author: Francesc Botet, MD, PhD Neonatology Service Hospital Clínic de Barcelona Sabino de Arana 1 E-08028 Barcelona Spain Tel.: +34-93-2275600 Fax: +34-93-2275605

Citation Information: Journal of Perinatal Medicine. Volume 38, Issue 3, Pages 269–273, ISSN (Online) 1619-3997, ISSN (Print) 0300-5577, DOI: 10.1515/jpm.2010.029, February 2010

Publication History:
Received:
2009-05-29
Revised:
2009-08-27
Accepted:
2009-10-07
Published Online:
2010-02-02

Abstract

Aims: To assess the relationship between maternal clinical chorioamnionitis and neonatal outcome in preterm very-low birthweight (VLBW) infants.

Methods: An observational case-control study was conducted in the Neonatology Services of 12 acute-care teaching hospitals in Spain. Between January 2004 and December 2006, all consecutive VLBW (≤1500 g) infants born to a mother with clinical chorioamnionitis were enrolled. Controls were infants without chorioamnionitis matched by gestational age who were born immediately after each index case.

Results: There were 165 cases and 163 controls. A significantly higher percentage of cases than controls required intubation (53% vs. 35.8%), had normal intrauterine growth (98.1% vs. 84.7%), were born in a tertiary center (inborn) (95.1% vs. 89.1%), from single gestations (76.4% vs. 65.6%) and vaginal delivery (47.3% vs. 33.3%), showed a lower Apgar score at 5 min, and presented a higher rate of early-onset sepsis (10.4% vs. 1.2%). Older maternal age (32.5 vs. 30.8 years), premature labor (67.3% vs. 25.8%), premature rupture of membranes (61.3% vs. 25.8%), and antibiotic treatment (88.5% vs. 52.3%) were significantly more frequent among cases than controls.

Conclusions: After controlling by gestational age, maternal chorioamnionitis was associated with neonatal depression and early sepsis but not with other prematurity-related complications.

Keywords: Chorioamnionitis; fetal membranes; infant, premature; premature birth; premature rupture

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