Read Oxford Handbook of Midwifery Online
Authors: Janet Medforth,Sue Battersby,Maggie Evans,Beverley Marsh,Angela Walker
Prevention is the best strategy. Women may be offered pyrimethamine or sulfadiazine to limit transmission of the infection.
Advise pregnant women to:
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CHAPTER 9
Pregnancy complications
168
Intrauterine growth restriction
Growth restriction is failure of the fetus to reach normal growth param- eters.
1
This refers to a fetus that is less than the 10th percentile for its gestational age. Clinical measurement is often unreliable but if growth restriction is suspected the mother should be referred to the obstetrician for confirmation.
Causes of intrauterine growth restriction
Maternal factors which might influence fetal growth
Pregnancy factors which might influence fetal growth
Monitoring growth
because of fat deposition in the fetal liver. This is reduced in growth- restricted fetuses and increased in macrosomic fetuses. The ratio between the head and abdominal circumference helps distinguish between the two types of growth restriction:
Asymmetrical growth restriction
INTRAUTERINE GROWTH RESTRICTION
169
Symmetrical growth restriction
It is often difficult to distinguish between the growth restricted and merely small fetus. The cause may be attributed to incorrect dates and the woman given a revised date of delivery. Measurements taken from the early pregnancy scan are therefore essential to avoid induction of labour that is either too early or too late.
1
Baschat AA, Galan HL, Ross MG, Gabbe SG (2007). Intrauterine growth restriction. In: Gabbe SG, Niebyl JR, Simpson JL (eds)
Obstetrics: Normal and Problem Pregnancies.
5th edn. Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier Churchill Livingstone.
CHAPTER 9
Pregnancy complications
170
Multiple pregnancy
Incidence
In natural conceptions 1:80 result in twin pregnancy. 1:6400 conceptions results in triplets, and 1:512 000 results in quadruplets. The incidence of multiple pregnancies overall is on the increase due to the impact of suc- cessful infertility treatment.
Where an average incidence of triplets in a maternity unit delivering 3000 babies a year might result in a triplet birth every 2 years, it is becoming more common to see two to three such births in a year.
Twin pregnancy has the highest incidence and can be divided into two types:
Monozygotic
—sometimes referred to as identical twins. The incidence is 2.5–4 per 1000 births.
Dizygotic or non-identical twins
. The incidence is more frequent with hered- itary factors from both the mother and father affecting the frequency.
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Diagnosis is invariably made at the time of the dating scan early in the second trimester. By 20 weeks the uterus will be large for gestational age
and this is obvious on palpation. If a mother is late booking or has not received antenatal care the diagnosis may be made quite late in pregnancy.
It is rare nowadays to diagnose twins only once the mother is in labour.
Special considerations
Serum screening tests for fetal abnormality are unsuitable as the results will be unreliable. Nuchal translucency scans, placental biopsy or amnio- centesis are options the mother may wish to consider.
During pregnancy the mother has a higher risk of complications developing such as:
MULTIPLE PREGNANCY
171
Antenatal management