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Dive into the research topics where Barbara Eucker is active.

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Featured researches published by Barbara Eucker.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1999

Urinary incontinence in pregnancy and the puerperium: A prospective study

John M. Thorp; Peggy Norton; L.Lewis Wall; Jeffrey A. Kuller; Barbara Eucker; Ellen Wells

OBJECTIVE Pregnancy and childbirth are commonly thought to be associated with the development of urinary incontinence and lower urinary tract symptoms. The purpose of this study was to assess the relationship, if any, between pregnancy and the development of lower urinary tract symptoms. STUDY DESIGN A prospective study of lower urinary tract symptoms was carried out in a cohort of pregnant women who answered a series of symptom questionnaires and kept a 24-hour bladder chart on which frequency of urination and volumes voided were recorded throughout pregnancy and for 8 weeks after birth. RESULTS A total of 123 women participated in the study. Mean daily urine output (P =.01) and the mean number of voids per day (P =.01) increased with gestational age and declined after delivery. Episodes of urinary incontinence peaked in the third trimester and improved after birth (P =.001). White women had higher mean voided volumes and fewer voiding episodes than did black women. Ingestion of caffeine was associated with smaller voided volumes and greater frequency of urination. CONCLUSION Pregnancy is associated with an increase in urinary incontinence. This phenomenon decreases in the puerperium. Pregnancy and childbirth trauma are important factors in the development of urinary incontinence among women. These findings warrant further investigation.


Journal of Developmental Origins of Health and Disease | 2011

Variable placental thickness affects placental functional efficiency independent of other placental shape abnormalities

Michael Yampolsky; Carolyn Salafia; Oleksandr Shlakhter; Dawn P. Misra; Danielle Haas; Barbara Eucker; John M. Thorp

Our previous work suggests that stressors that impact placental vascular growth result in a deformed chorionic surface shape, which reflects an abnormal placental three-dimensional shape. We propose to use variability of placental disk thickness as a reflector of deviations in placental vascular growth at the finer level of the fetal stems. We hypothesize that increased variability of thickness is associated with abnormal chorionic surface shape, but will be a predictor of reduced placental functional efficiency (smaller baby for a given placental weight) independent of shape. These measures may shed light on the mechanisms linking placental growth to risk of adult disease. The sample was drawn from the Pregnancy, Infection and Nutrition Study. In all, 94.6% of the cohort consented to placental examination. Of the 1023 delivered at term, those previously sectioned by the Pathology Department were excluded, leaving 587 (57%) cases with intact placentas that were sliced and photographed. The chorionic surface shape and the shape of a central randomly oriented placental slice were analyzed and measures were compared using correlation. Lower mean placental disk thickness and more variable disk thickness were each strongly and significantly correlated with deformed chorionic plate shapes. More variable disk thickness was strongly correlated with reduced placental efficiency independent of abnormal chorionic surface shape. Variability of placental disk thickness, simple to measure in a single randomly oriented central slice, may be an easily acquired measure that is an independent indicator of lowered placental efficiency, which may in turn program the infant and result in increased risk for development of adult diseases.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 2001

204 Psychosocial factors and preterm birth among African-American and white women in Central North Carolina

Nancy Dole; David A. Savitz; Anna Maria Siega-Riz; Michael J. McMahon; Barbara Eucker; John M. Thorp

OBJECTIVES We assessed associations between psychosocial factors and preterm birth, stratified by race in a prospective cohort study. METHODS We surveyed 1898 women who used university and public health prenatal clinics regarding various psychosocial factors. RESULTS African Americans were at higher risk of preterm birth if they used distancing from problems as a coping mechanism or reported racial discrimination. Whites were at higher risk if they had high counts of negative life events or were not living with a partner. The association of pregnancy-related anxiety with preterm birth weakened when medical comorbidities were taken into account. No association with preterm birth was found for depression, general social support, or church attendance. CONCLUSIONS Some associations between psychosocial variables and preterm birth differed by race.


Placenta | 2009

CENTRALITY OF THE UMBILICAL CORD INSERTION IN A HUMAN PLACENTA INFLUENCES THE PLACENTAL EFFICIENCY

Michael Yampolsky; Carolyn Salafia; Oleksandr Shlakhter; Danielle Haas; Barbara Eucker; John M. Thorp


Placenta | 2010

Placental surface shape, function, and effects of maternal and fetal vascular pathology

Carolyn Salafia; Michael Yampolsky; Dawn P. Misra; Oleksander Shlakhter; Danielle Haas; Barbara Eucker; John M. Thorp


Placenta | 2008

Modeling the Variability of Shapes of a Human Placenta

Michael Yampolsky; Carolyn Salafia; Oleksandr Shlakhter; Danielle Haas; Barbara Eucker; John M. Thorp


American Journal of Epidemiology | 2005

Measures of Placental Growth in Relation to Birth Weight and Gestational Age

Carolyn Salafia; Elizabeth Maas; John M. Thorp; Barbara Eucker; John C. Pezzullo; David A. Savitz


Infectious Diseases in Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2005

Diagnosis of bacterial vaginosis from self-obtained vaginal swabs.

Robert Strauss; Barbara Eucker; David A. Savitz; John M. Thorp


Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology | 2006

Attitudes toward participation in a pregnancy and child cohort study

Julie L. Daniels; David A. Savitz; Chyrise B. Bradley; Nancy Dole; Kelly R. Evenson; Barbara Eucker; Amy H. Herring; Anna Maria Siega-Riz; John M. Thorp


Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology | 2008

Alteration in vaginal microflora, douching prior to pregnancy, and preterm birth

John M. Thorp; Nancy Dole; Amy H. Herring; Thaddeus McDonald; Barbara Eucker; David A. Savitz; Diane Kaczor

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John M. Thorp

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Carolyn Salafia

New York Methodist Hospital

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Frances W. Smith

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Michael J. McMahon

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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