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Dive into the research topics where Jana L. Atterbury is active.

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Featured researches published by Jana L. Atterbury.


Journal of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics | 1995

Maternal Anxiety During Pregnancy: Effect on Fetal Behavior at 38 to 40 Weeks of Gestation

Lynn J. Groome; Matthew J. Swiber; Lynn S. Bentz; Scherri B. Holland; Jana L. Atterbury

The purpose of this study was to determine if there is a relationship between fetal behavior and maternal anxiety during pregnancy. The study population consisted of 18 uncomplicated human pregnancies at 38 to 40 weeks gestation. Maternal anxiety was assessed one time using Spielbergers State-Trait Anxiety Inventory. After an overnight fast, each mother was given a standard meal on arrival to the fetal testing unit. Each fetus was examined for 4 hours using heart rate monitoring and real-time sonography. Fetal behavioral states were assigned based on heart rate pattern and the presence or absence of eye and gross body movements. We found that, compared with fetuses of mothers with low trait anxiety scores, fetuses of mothers with relatively high trait anxiety scores spent significantly more time in quiet sleep and exhibited less gross body movement when in active sleep. The results of this pilot study raise the possibility that maternal anxiety during pregnancy may have a significant effect on fetal behavior.


The Journal of Maternal-fetal Medicine | 1999

Pneumonia as a Complication of Pregnancy

Mary B. Munn; Lynn J. Groome; Jana L. Atterbury; Susan L. Baker; Charles Hoff

Objective: To identify risk factors for the development of antepartum pneumonia and to describe maternal and perinatal outcome in pregnant women with pneumonia.Methods: The study group consisted of 59 women with antepartum pneumonia. Pneumonia was defined by the presence of lower respiratory tract symptoms, radiographic findings, no other source of infection, and at least two of the following: oral temperature ≥38°C, white blood cell count ≥15,000/ml, auscultatory findings, and/or positive sputum cultures. For comparison, a control group (n = 118) of pregnant women was formed by selecting the first mother who delivered immediately before and after an index study subject.Results: Mothers in the study group were significantly more likely than women in the control group to have either a history of asthma (P = 0.022) or an admission hematocrit ≥30% (P < 0.001). Women with pneumonia were also more likely to receive a tocolytic agent (P < 0.001) and/or beta-methasone to enhance fetal lung maturity (P < 0.001). ...


Developmental Psychobiology | 1999

Spontaneous motor activity in the perinatal infant before and after birth: Stability in individual differences

Lynn J. Groome; Matthew J. Swiber; Scherri B. Holland; Lynn S. Bentz; Jana L. Atterbury; R. Franklin Trimm

This study was undertaken to determine if a relationship existed between the duration of spontaneous general movements before and after birth. Twenty-two infants were examined three times as fetuses between 38 and 40 weeks gestational age and three times as neonates between 2 and 4 weeks postnatal age. Motor activity level during active sleep periods was quantified by direct sonographic visualization for fetuses and by videotaped images of trunk movement for neonates. We found that both fetuses and neonates exhibited stable individual differences in motor activity level. In addition, infants who moved at a certain rate as fetuses generally moved at the same relative rate as neonates up to 4-weeks postnatal age. Our findings suggested that individual differences in motor activity level in the 1st month following birth probably arise during fetal life.


Early Human Development | 1999

Behavioral state affects heart rate response to low-intensity sound in human fetuses

Lynn J. Groome; Donna M. Mooney; Scherri B. Holland; Lisa A. Smith; Jana L. Atterbury; Roscoe A. Dykman

The cardiac orienting reflex is elicited by a low-intensity sound, it consists of a sustained heart rate (HR) deceleration, and it is a specific physiological correlate of cognitive processing. In this study we examined the relationship between behavioral state and the cardiac orienting reflex in 75 human fetuses between 36 and 40 weeks gestation. Each fetus was stimulated with a 30-s speech sound at an average intensity of 83 dB SPL in quiet sleep (QS) and active sleep (AS). The fetal cardiac electrical signal was captured transabdominally at a rate of 1024 Hz and fetal R-waves were extracted using adaptive signal processing. Fetal behavioral states were assigned based on HR pattern and the presence or absence of eye and general body movements. We found that a significant HR deceleration occurred, in both QS and AS, following stimulus onset. However, HR decelerations occurred more often in QS than AS; and for fetuses exhibiting a HR deceleration, the magnitude of the deceleration was greater in AS compared to QS. In addition, in AS female fetuses exhibited a larger, more sustained HR deceleratory response than male fetuses, but the seconds x gender interaction in QS was not significant. Based on these results, we concluded that behavioral state is an important determinant of the HR deceleratory response in human fetuses.


Attention Perception & Psychophysics | 2000

Temporal pattern and spectral complexity as stimulus parameters for eliciting a cardiacorienting reflex inhuman fetuses

Lynn J. Groome; Donna Mooney; Scherri B. Holland; Yolanda D. Smith; Jana L. Atterbury; Roscoe A. Dykman

The purpose of this study was to determine whether temporal pattern and/or spectral complexity were important stimulus parameters for eliciting a cardiac orienting reflex (OR) in low-risk human fetuses. Each of 28 term fetuses was exposed to four sounds formed from the four different combinations of temporal pattern (pulsed, continuous) and spectral complexity (sine wave, IsJ). The fetal cardiac electrical signal was captured transabdominally at a rate of 1024 Hz, and fetal R-waves were extracted by using adaptive signal-processing techniques. We found that pulsed sounds elicited a significantly greater decrease in heart rate (HR) than did continuous sounds. However, the HR response was relatively unaffected by spectral complexity. For the pure tone and the phoneme used in this study, our results indicate that temporal characteristics were more effective at eliciting a cardiac OR in human fetuses than was spectral complexity.


Developmental Psychobiology | 1997

The heart rate deceleratory response in low-risk human fetuses: effect of stimulus intensity on response topography.

Lynn J. Groome; Donna M. Mooney; Scherri B. Holland; Lynn S. Bentz; Jana L. Atterbury; Roscoe A. Dykman

The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of stimulus intensity on heart rate response in 18 low-risk human fetuses between 37 and 40 weeks gestation. Each fetus was stimulated in quiet sleep with a 30-s voice sound at intensities of 80 dB and 90 dB. The fetal cardiac electrical signal was captured transabdominally at a rate of 1024 Hz and fetal R-waves were extracted using adaptive signal-processing techniques. We found that fetuses generally exhibited a 5- to 10-s decrease in heart rate following stimulus onset at an intensity of 80 dB. The response pattern changed from deceleratory to acceleratory when stimulus intensity was increased to 90 dB. Our findings suggest that a heart rate deceleration at low-stimulus intensity may be a component of the orienting reflex in the human fetus.


Early Human Development | 1997

Temporal stability in the distribution of behavioral states for individual human fetuses

Lynn J. Groome; Karan P. Singh; Lynn S. Bentz; Scherri B. Holland; Jana L. Atterbury; Matthew J. Swiber; R. Franklin Trimm

Although behavioral state analyses have been useful in differentiating between groups of normal and at-risk fetuses, the large between-subject differences in the percent time spent in the various behavioral states poses a major obstacle in identifying abnormal neurological functioning in individual fetuses. Does this variability represent a true difference in state organization between fetuses, or does it simply reflect individual fluctuations in state control at the time of observation? To answer this question, we examined each of 33 human fetuses for 4 h on three separate days between 38 and 40 weeks gestation. The percent time spent in each behavioral state and in transition and insertion periods was determined for each of the three 4-h study sessions, and within-subject analysis of variance was performed to obtain an objective measure of state profile consistency for each fetus. We found that, on the average, fetuses exhibited remarkable within-subject consistency in their state profiles. However, even among this group of low-risk fetuses, there were significant differences in the degree of state organization achieved by individual fetuses. These findings, which indicate the existence of a well-developed central nervous system before birth, suggest that individual differences in the consistency of behavioral state profiles may be indexing important between-subject differences in neurological development.


The Journal of Maternal-fetal Medicine | 1996

Blood Pressure Changes in Normotensive Women Readmitted in the Postpartum Period with Severe Preeclampsia/Eclampsia

Jana L. Atterbury; Lynn J. Groome; Charles Hoff

The purpose of this study was to determine whether women who had no clinical evidence of preeclampsia at delivery, but who were later readmitted with postpartum severe preeclampsia or eclampsia, differed in mean arterial pressure (MAP) and clinical presentation from women who either remained normotensive or had severe preeclampsia or eclampsia at the time of delivery. Control subjects did not require readmission and were matched (2:1) with study subjects in consecutive order for date of delivery and maternal age, race, and parity. Women in the study group had a significantly greater increase in MAP after delivery than control subjects, and analysis of variance for linear trends demonstrated highly significant differences between the study and control groups in the average intrapartum and postpartum MAPs. Compared to women in either control group, mothers who were readmitted were significantly more likely to demonstrate a > 10-mm Hg increase in MAP between the intrapartum and postpartum periods (delta MAP). Normotensive women with a delta MAP > 10 mm Hg had more than a threefold risk of readmission in the postpartum period with severe preeclampsia or eclampsia. Women who were readmitted reported a significantly greater frequency of headaches and nausea and vomiting than women with intrapartum preeclampsia. In summary, our findings indicate that MAP increase following delivery in normotensive women who were later readmitted with severe preeclampsia or eclampsia.


Obstetrics & Gynecology | 1998

Methods used to diagnose premature rupture of membranes: a national survey of 812 obstetric nurses

Jana L. Atterbury; Lynn J. Groome; Charles Hoff

Objective To identify methods used to diagnose premature rupture of membranes (PROM). Methods A 14-item questionnaire was mailed to 1992 registered nurses certified in inpatient obstetrics to determine information on practice facility, obstetric services, procedures used to obtain vaginal fluids for testing, and methods used to diagnose PROM. Results A total of 812 (40.8%) surveys were available for analysis. Of tests used to confirm PROM, observation of pooling fluid in the posterior fornix and fern tests were much more likely to be used in teaching and military hospitals and in facilities with tertiary obstetric services than in private hospitals (all P values < .001). To obtain vaginal fluids for fern and nitrazine testing, the dry glove method (ie, insertion of a gloved hand or nitrazine strip into the vagina) was used significantly more often in private hospitals than in teaching or military facilities (P < .001). In addition, the dry glove method was used significantly more often (P < .001) and the speculum examination was used less often (P < .001) to collect vaginal fluids for testing when private physicians performed more than 75% of deliveries at a particular hospital. In contrast, vaginal fluid was obtained during a sterile speculum examination more often in facilities in which more than 75% of deliveries were performed by residents (P < .001), and/or when more than 75% of speculum examinations were performed by nursing personnel (P < .001). Multiple linear regression analyses indicated that observation of pooling fluid and use of the fern test were significantly associated with hospital type, percentage of deliveries by private physicians, and percentage of speculum examinations performed by nursing personnel (all P values < .001). Conclusion A sterile speculum examination is used more often to obtain vaginal fluids for testing and to diagnose ruptured membranes in teaching or military facilities and when nursing personnel have been trained in speculum examinations.


Applied Nursing Research | 1996

Elevated midtrimester mean arterial blood pressure in women with severe preeclampsia

Jana L. Atterbury; Lynne J. Groome; Susan L. Baker

Although early identification of pregnant women who are at risk for severe preeclampsia may help reduce maternal-perinatal sequelae, an adequate screening test for this disorder has not been described. The purpose of this study was to determine if a group of women (n = 57) who developed severe preeclampsia had a higher midtrimester mean arterial pressure (MAP-2) than a matched group of women (n = 57) who remained normotensive throughout pregnancy and the puerperium. It was found that women who developed severe preeclampsia had a significantly higher MAP-2 than normotensive women and significantly more preeclamptic subjects had an MAP-2 > or = 85 mmHg than did control subjects. Thus, an elevated MAP-2 may help identify women who are at risk for the development of severe preeclampsia.

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Lynn J. Groome

University of South Alabama

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Scherri B. Holland

University of South Alabama

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Charles Hoff

University of South Alabama

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Lynn S. Bentz

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Matthew J. Swiber

University of South Alabama

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Susan L. Baker

University of South Alabama

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Donna M. Mooney

University of Arkansas at Little Rock

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Mary B. Munn

University of Texas Medical Branch

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Roscoe A. Dykman

University of Arkansas at Little Rock

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Joni A. Yarnell

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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