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American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1989

Infection and labor V. Prevalence, microbiology, and clinical significance of intraamniotic infection in women with preterm labor and intact membranes

Roberto Romero; Marina Sirtori; Enrique Oyarzun; Cecilia Avila; Moshe Mazor; Robert Callahan; Virginia Sabo; Apostolos P. Athanassiadis; John C. Hobbins

Abstract Amniotic fluid was retrieved by amniocentesis from 264 patients with preterm labor and intact membranes admitted to Yale-New Haven Hospital from Jan. 1, 1985, to July 31, 1988. The prevalence of a positive amniotic fluid culture was 9.1% (24/264). A total of 111 patients (42%) delivered preterm neonates, and 24 (21.6°/x) of those had positive amniotic fluid cultures. The diagnostic indexes of the Gram stain of amniotic fluid in the prediction of a positive amniotic fluid culture were as follows: sensitivity, 79.1 %; specificity, 99.6%; positive predictive value, 95%; and negative predictive value, 98%. Endotoxin was detected with the limulus amebocyte lysate assay in 4.9% (13/264) of patients with preterm labor. All patients with endotoxin in the amniotic fluid delivered preterm neonates. The three most frequently isolated organisms were Ureaplasma urealyticum (n = 6), Fusobacterium species (n = 5), and Mycoplasma hominis (n = 4). Clinical chorioamnionitis was present in only 12.5% of the patients with positive amniotic fluid cultures. Women with positive amniotic fluid cultures had lower gestational ages and more advanced cervical dilatation on admission than women with negative cultures. Preterm infants born to mothers with positive amniotic fluid cultures had a higher incidence of respiratory distress syndrome and infectious complications than preterm neonates born after negative amniotic fluid cultures. These data underscore the frequency and importance of intraamniotic infections in women with preterm labor.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1989

Infection and labor: III. Interleukin-1: A signal for the onset of parturition

Roberto Romero; Dan T. Brody; Enrique Oyarzun; Moshe Mazor; Ying King Wu; John C. Hobbins; Scott K. Durum

The regulatory signals responsible for the increased biosynthesis of prostaglandins during parturition have not been established. Because interleukin-1 is capable of stimulating prostaglandin production by intrauterine tissues and is an inflammatory mediator, we propose that interleukin-1 may act as a signal for the onset of human labor in the setting of intrauterine infection. The purpose of these studies was to determine interleukin-1 activity in amniotic fluid and to establish its relationship with the onset of term and preterm labor. Amniotic fluid from 182 patients was assayed for interleukin-1 activity. Cell-associated interleukin-1 activity was detected in fluid obtained in the third trimester but not in fluid obtained in the second trimester of pregnancy, suggesting a maturational event in interleukin-1 production. The factor responsible for interleukin-1 activity had biochemical characteristics of interleukin-1 alpha (estimated molecular weight of 14 kilodaltons, isoelectric point = 4.9), and its activity was blocked with an anti-interleukin-1 alpha antisera. Women in spontaneous labor at term were likely to have fluid phase interleukin-1 activity in amniotic fluid than women who were not in labor at term. Preterm labor in the setting of intraamniotic infections was associated with significant interleukin-1 activity in amniotic fluid. This bioactivity was predominantly attributable to interleukin-1 beta. A strong correlation between interleukin-1 and amniotic fluid concentrations of prostaglandin E2 and prostaglandin F2 alpha was found in women in preterm labor. These findings support the hypothesis that interleukin-1 may play a role in the initiation of preterm labor associated with intraamniotic infection.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1982

An evaluation of two equations for predicting fetal weight by ultrasound.

Mary Jo Shepard; Virginia A. Richards; Richard L. Berkowitz; Steven L. Warsof; John C. Hobbins

In an earlier study we presented a method of determining fetal weight from ultrasound measurements of abdominal circumference (AC) and biparietal diameter (BPD). From an equation with these two measurements as independent variables we generated tables of estimated fetal weights (E1). Although these tables have been very useful, we had the impression we were underestimating fetal weight. Therefore, we reconsidered an earlier unpublished table generated from a different equation (E2). While most estimates from E1 and E2 were likely to be within 10% of actual weight, there was significant underestimation with E1. E2 provides a better balance between the distribution of overestimations and underestimations.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1989

Infection and labor. IV: Cachectin-tumor necrosis factor in the amniotic fluid of women with intraamniotic infection and preterm labor

Roberto Romero; Kirk R. Manogue; Murray D. Mitchell; Ying King Wu; Enrique Oyarzun; John C. Hobbins; Anthony Cerami

A growing body of evidence supports a causal link between subclinical intrauterine infection and preterm labor. The mechanisms responsible for the onset of parturition in this setting have not been elucidated. The conventional view has been that bacterial products increase prostaglandin biosynthesis by intrauterine tissues and this, in turn, leads to the onset of labor. An alternative or complementary mechanism is that microbial products activate the host monocyte-macrophage system and that cytokines released during this process signal the initiation of parturition by stimulating prostaglandin biosynthesis by intrauterine tissues. This study was conducted to determine if cachectin-tumor necrosis factor is present in the amniotic fluid of women with intraamniotic infection and whether this cytokine can alter the rate of prostaglandin biosynthesis by intrauterine tissues. Amniotic fluid from 54 women was assayed for tumor necrosis factor. Tumor necrosis factor was not detectable in the amniotic fluid of women without intraamniotic infection regardless of the presence or absence of term or preterm labor. On the other hand, the amniotic fluid of 11 of 15 women with preterm labor and intraamniotic infection had measurable tumor necrosis factor. This cytokine stimulated prostaglandin E2 biosynthesis by amnion cells in monolayer culture in a dose-dependent fashion. These data support the concept that macrophage activation is involved in the onset of human parturition in the setting of infection. We propose that the host (fetus and/or mother) signals the onset of parturition through the secretion of inflammatory cytokines released in response to bacterial invasion.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1983

Fetal Cystic Hygroma: Cause and Natural History

Chervenak Fa; Isaacson G; Blakemore Kj; Breg Wr; John C. Hobbins; Richard L. Berkowitz; Tortora M; Mayden K; Maurice J. Mahoney

Fetal cystic hygromas are congenital malformations of the lymphatic system appearing as single or multiloculated fluid-filled cavities, most often about the neck. They are thought to arise from failure of the lymphatic system to communicate with the venous system in the neck. They often progress to hydrops and cause fetal death. In an effort to delineate the cause and natural history of this disorder, we studied 15 consecutive cases of nuchal hygroma detected prenatally by ultrasound. None of the 15 fetuses ultimately survived. Thirteen fetuses were hydropic at the time of diagnosis; nine either died or were bradycardic in utero before abortion; one died a few hours after birth. Eleven fetuses (73 per cent) had karyotypes consistent with Turners syndrome, and an additional fetus with female genitalia had a 46,XY karyotype. Three fetuses had 46,XX karyotypes, and two of these had multiple malformations. When a hygroma is detected during fetal life, careful sonographic examination of the entire fetus, determination of the fetal karyotype, and an evaluation of the family history are indicated.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1982

Pregnancy and its outcome in women with and without surgical treatment of congenital heart disease

Ruth Whittemore; John C. Hobbins; Mary Allen Engle

Abstract In the state of Connecticut, 233 women with congenital heart defects were prospectively followed up through 482 pregnancies that resulted in 372 infants who were examined frequently during their first 3 years of life. Approximately half of the women had undergone cardiac surgery and they were compared with the women without operation. There was no maternal mortality, and no patient had infective endocarditis, brain abscess or a cerebrovascular accident. The proportion of pregnancies resulting in live births did not differ significantly in mothers with and without cardiac surgery; the average live birth rate was 77 percent in all. However, the number and size of live-born infants was much greater in mothers who had become acyanotic as a result of reparative surgery than in the still cyanotic women, whether or not they had had palliative surgery. In cyanotic women, placental size was abnormally large in relation to birth weight, which was abnormally low. When the mothers were classified according to cardiac function, there was a significant difference between the number of infants born alive to mothers in good to excellent status and the number born to mothers in fair to poor condition. The latter had a significant increase in interrupted pregnancies as well as in cardiovascular complications during pregnancy. The total group had a 16.1 percent incidence rate of infants with congenital heart disease. This rate was corrected to 14.2 percent by removal of seven mothers, two with Noonans syndrome, one with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and four with a family history of congenital heart defects.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1988

Intraamniotic infection and the onset of labor in preterm premature rupture of the membranes

Roberto Romero; Ruben Quintero; Enrique Oyarzun; Ying King Wu; Virginia Sabo; Moshe Mazor; John C. Hobbins

The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between intraamniotic infection and the onset of labor in patients with preterm premature rupture of the membranes. Two hundred and thirty consecutive patients were admitted with premature rupture of the membranes to Yale-New Haven Hospital from January 1985 to July 1987. Amniotic fluid was retrieved by amniocentesis from 96% (221/230). Sixty-one patients were in labor on admission (27.6%, 61/221) and 39% of them (24/61) had a positive amniotic fluid culture. Patients in labor on admission were more likely to have a positive amniotic fluid culture than those who were not in labor on admission (24/61 versus 41/160, p = 0.049). Of the 160-patients who were not in labor on admission, 81 subsequently went into spontaneous labor; microbiologic information at the time of labor was known in 48 of these patients (59.2%). Seventy-five percent (36/48) of these patients had a positive amniotic fluid culture. The incidence of intraamniotic infection in quiescent women who subsequently went into labor was higher than that of patients admitted in active labor (75% versus 39%, p = 0.0004). These results provide a basis for the clinical impression that the onset of labor in women with preterm premature rupture of the membranes is associated with a subclinical intraamniotic infection. The mechanisms responsible for the onset of labor in women without an intraamniotic infection may be associated with an extraamniotic infection (e.g., deciduitis) or a noninfectious process.


Prostaglandins | 1989

Interleukin-1 stimulates prostaglandin biosynthesis by human amnion

Roberto Romero; Scott K. Durum; Charles A. Dinarello; Enrique Oyarzun; John C. Hobbins; Murray D. Mitchell

The purpose of these studies was to determine if Interleukin-1 (IL-1) alters the rate of prostaglandin biosynthesis by human amnion. Primary monolayer cultures of amnion cells were established from women undergoing elective cesarean section before the onset of labor. Natural purified and recombinant human IL-1 alpha and IL-1 beta were incubated with amnion cells in culture, and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) biosynthesis was measured by radioimmunoassay in cell-free media. A concentration-dependent increase in PGE2 production by amnion cells occurred in response to natural purified and recombinant IL-1 preparations. No differences in the parameters of the dose-response curves between the two IL-1 gene products could be determined (p greater than 0.05). Indomethacin blocked the effect of IL-1 in prostaglandin biosynthesis by human amnion. Interleukin-1, a fever mediator, could serve as a signal for the initiation of labor in cases of intrauterine or systemic infection.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1979

The ultrasonic changes in the maturing placenta and their relation to fetal pulmonic maturity

Peter Grannum; Richard L. Berkowitz; John C. Hobbins

A practical classification of placental maturity changes has been developed based on a review of multiple ultrasound evaluations of placental texture over a 4 year period. This classification grades placentas from 0 to 3 according to specific ultrasonic findings at the basal and chorionic plates as well as within the substance of the organ itself. The placentas of 129 patients were graded according to this system at the time of ultrasound evaluation. Eighty-six patients had placentas classified as Grade 1 or greater and all of these had lecithin-sphingomyelin (L/S) ratio determinations performed. Mature L/S ratios (2.0) were found in 68% of Grade I (21/31), 88% of Grade II (28/32), and 100% of Grade III placentas (23/23). These results suggest a correlation between maturational changes of the placenta as seen by ultrasound and fetal pulmonic maturity as indicated by L/S ratio.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1979

Ultrasound in the diagnosis of congenital anomalies.

John C. Hobbins; Peter Grannum; Richard L. Berkowitz; Rosamund Silverman; Maurice J. Mahoney

With high-resolution ultrasound equipment, it is now possible to diagnose certain fetal anomalies in the third trimester and in some cases before the twentieth week of gestation. During a 27 month period 2,548 ultrasound scans were performed in high-risk patients. An anomaly was diagnosed in 10 of 122 second-trimester patients who were at risk for recurrent fetal defects. Fetal deformity was also found in 26 third-trimester patients. Of the 2.8% of patients found to have polyhydramnios 18% were associated with various types of anomaly. With ultrasound it was possible to examine internal fetal anatomy and to identify abnormalities of the fetal cranium, spine, chest, abdomen, and limbs. These anomalies are reviewed here in detail. Based on ultrasonically derived information, second-trimester patients can be offered information concerning the status of their fetuses at risk genetically and physicians can better manage third-trimester patients with diagnosed fetal deformities.

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Roberto Romero

National Institutes of Health

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Moshe Mazor

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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