Anita Connelly
University of Sydney
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British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology | 1991
B.J. Trudinger; Cook Cm; WarwickB. Giles; S. Ng; E. Fong; Anita Connelly; W. Wilcox
Summary. Flow velocity waveforms (FVWs) from the fetal umbilical artery were recorded from 2178 pregnant women over a 6‐year period. All of them had an obstetric factor indicating increased risk of fetal compromise. A total of 6749 studies was recorded. The systolic diastolic (AB) ratio was measured and classified as normal (<95th centile), elevated (95–99th centile), high (>99th centile) or extreme (absent diastolic flow). The results of these studies have been related to subsequent fetal and neonatal outcome. An abnormal umbilical artery FVW was associated with shorter gestation and infants with lower birthweight, shorter length and lower ponderal index. There was a highly significant association between an abnormal FVW and the birth of an infant small for gestational age. The significance of the association increased with the increased abnormality of the umbilical artery FVW and this was independent of gestational age. Preterm infants associated with high or extreme AB ratios spent twice as long in the neonatal nursery than those with normal AB ratios. Analysis of 794 pregnancies studies serially indicated that an abnormal FVW in which the AB ratio was increasing, in contrast to a decreasing AB ratio, predicted a poor outcome for both size at birth and duration of neonatal intensive care. We conclude that in high risk pregnancy Doppler umbilical artery FVW studies predict the most compromised fetuses in terms of growth retardation and requirements for neonatal intensive care.
The Lancet | 1987
B.J. Trudinger; WarwickB. Giles; Cook Cm; Anita Connelly; R.S. Thompson
300 patients at high fetal risk (mean gestational age 34 wk) were randomised to a group for antenatal doppler umbilical artery waveform studies and a control group. The timing of delivery was similar in the control and doppler-report-available groups overall. However, in the report group obstetricians allowed the pregnancies of those not selected for elective delivery to continue longer. There was no difference in the rates for elective delivery (induction of labour or caesarean section) in the two groups, whereas among those who went into labour (induced or spontaneous) emergency caesarean section was more frequent in the control group (23%) than in the report group (13%). Fetal distress in labour was also more common in the control group. Babies from the control group spent longer in neonatal intensive care (level 3) and needed more respiratory support than did those in the report group. The findings indicate that the availability of doppler studies leads to better obstetrical decision making.
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1988
Brian Trudinger; Colleen M. Cook; Rosemary S. Thompson; Warwick Giles; Anita Connelly
A randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial was carried out to evaluate the fetal benefits of low-dose aspirin (150 mg/day) as a treatment of placental insufficiency during the last trimester of pregnancy. Forty-six women referred for study because there was concern about fetal welfare were found to have an elevated umbilical artery wave form systolic/diastolic ratio. Mothers with severe hypertension were excluded because fetal condition would not necessarily be the dominant determinant of obstetric decision making. A distinction was made between a high systolic/diastolic ratio (greater than 95th but less than 99.95th percentile) and an extreme systolic/diastolic ratio (greater than 99.95th percentile). There were 34 patients in the high ratio group and 12 in the extreme group. Aspirin therapy was associated with an increase in birth weight (mean difference 526 gm [p less than 0.02]), head circumference (1.7 cm [p less than 0.025]), and placental weight (136 gm [p less than 0.02]) in those patients with a high initial umbilical artery systolic/diastolic ratio. For the 12 women with an extreme initial systolic/diastolic ratio, aspirin therapy did not result in a significantly different pregnancy outcome.
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1987
Brian Trudinger; Denise Stevens; Anita Connelly; J. Robert S. Hales; George Alexander; Laurence Bradley; Alan Fawcett; Rosemary S. Thompson
Obstetrics & Gynecology | 1988
Brian Trudinger; Stewart Gj; Cook Cm; Anita Connelly; Exner T
Obstetrics & Gynecology | 1988
Warwick Giles; Brian J. Trudinger; Colleen M. Cook; Anita Connelly
Obstetrics & Gynecology | 1990
Warwick Giles; Brian Trudinger; Cook Cm; Anita Connelly
Obstetrics & Gynecology | 1993
Warwick Giles; Brian Trudinger; Cook Cm; Anita Connelly
Obstetrics & Gynecology | 1989
Wilcox Gr; Brian Trudinger; Cook Cm; Wilcox Wr; Anita Connelly
The Lancet | 1988
Brian J. Trudinger; Cook Cm; Rosemary S. Thompson; Warwick Giles; Anita Connelly