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Featured researches published by Pooja Sikka.


Gynecologic and Obstetric Investigation | 2014

Pregnancy Outcome in Hyperthyroidism: A Case Control Study

Neelam Aggarawal; Vanita Suri; Rimpi Singla; Seema Chopra; Pooja Sikka; Viral N. Shah; Anil Bhansali

Background: Data comparing pregnancy outcome in hyperthyroid women with euthyroid women are scarce. Hence, this study was carried out to assess the maternal and fetal outcome in pregnant women with hyperthyroidism to ascertain the effect of disease on pregnancy. Methodology: This retrospective study was conducted over a period of 28 years. We compared the maternal and fetal outcomes of 208 hyperthyroid women with 403 healthy controls, between women with well-controlled and uncontrolled disease and amongst women diagnosed with hyperthyroidism before and during pregnancy. Results: Maternal outcome: women with hyperthyroidism were at increased risk for preeclampsia (OR = 3.94), intrauterine growth restriction (OR = 2.16), spontaneous preterm labor (OR = 1.73), preterm birth (OR = 1.7), gestational diabetes mellitus (OR = 1.8), and cesarean delivery (OR = 1.47). Hyperthyroid women required induction of labor more frequently (OR = 3.61). Fetal outcome: newborns of hyperthyroid mothers had lower birth weight than normal ones (p = 0.0001). Women with uncontrolled disease had higher odds for still birth (OR = 8.42; 95% CI: 2.01-35.2) and lower birth weight (p = 0.0001). Conclusions: Obstetrical complications were higher in women with hyperthyroidism than normal women. Outcome was worsened by uncontrolled disease. Women with pregestational hyperthyroidism had better outcomes than those diagnosed with it during pregnancy.


Archives of Gynecology and Obstetrics | 2011

Pregnancy outcome in women with autoimmune hepatitis

Neelam Aggarwal; Seema Chopra; Vanita Suri; Pooja Sikka; R. K. Dhiman; Yogesh Chawla

IntroductionAutoimmune hepatitis (AIH) is a chronic disease of unknown cause, characterized by progressive hepatocellular inflammation and necrosis, frequently leading to cirrhosis. AIH usually affects young women and may influence fertility and pregnancy in them. Nearly 200 pregnancies have been reported so far in the world literature in women with AIH, and no definite guidelines have been established. We hereby report our experience of four pregnancies in women with definite diagnosis of AIH.Materials and methodsWe studied the maternal and perinatal outcome of four women with AIH. The medical history was recorded in detail. The pregnancies were allowed to continue with careful fetal and maternal surveillance. Antenatal complications, disease course during pregnancy, intrapartum maternal fetal events, mode of delivery, and perinatal outcome were noted.ResultsAll four patients had preterm labor: three had vaginal delivery and cesarean was done in one due to breech presentation with preterm rupture of membranes. All the infants were live born with birth weight appropriate for gestational age and were born with good Apgar scores and no congenital malformation. The incidence of post partum hemorrhage was 25% and so was the maternal mortality.ConclusionSuccessful pregnancy outcome in patients with well-controlled AIH seems to be a realistic expectation with careful monitoring jointly by the Obstetricians and Hepatologists, especially in the post partum period. Steroids seem to be the safe alternative as immunosuppressant therapy although azathioprine has also been seen to be generally safe for mother or baby.


European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology | 2011

Mechanical valve prosthesis and anticoagulation regimens in pregnancy: a tertiary centre experience

Vanita Suri; Anish Keepanasseril; Neelam Aggarwal; Seema Chopra; Rashmi Bagga; Pooja Sikka; Rajesh Vijayvergiya

OBJECTIVE This study was undertaken to analyze the maternal and perinatal outcome in women with prosthetic heart valves on different anticoagulant regimens. STUDY DESIGN A retrospective chart review of pregnancies in 40 women with mechanical valve prostheses at a tertiary referral centre from 1997 to 2010. The main outcome measures were major maternal complications and perinatal outcome. RESULTS The valves replaced were mitral (67.5%), aortic (15.0%), or both (17.5%). Forty-nine pregnancies (72.1%) resulted in live births, 3(4.4%) had stillbirths, and 13(19.1%) had spontaneous abortions and 1(1.4%) underwent therapeutic abortions. The live birth rate was higher in women on heparin (78.3%) compared with those on warfarin (66.9%). There were 2 maternal deaths due to acute mitral valvular thrombosis while on acenocoumarol in the second trimester. Hemorrhagic complications occurred in 3 patients on heparin in the postpartum period, 2 of whom required transfusion. In addition one patient who was on acenocoumarol developed secondary hemorrhage. CONCLUSION No anticoagulant regimen can be said to be entirely safe for use during pregnancy as there is a degree of risk with each regimen. Further larger studies are needed to come up with sufficient evidence-based recommendations for the best possible management of such patients to reduce the maternal risks after mechanical heart valve replacement without compromising fetal outcome.


Journal of Gynecologic Oncology | 2010

Mullerian adenosarcoma (heterologous) of the cervix with sarcomatous overgrowth: a case report with review of literature

Rajan Duggal; Raje Nijhawan; Neelam Aggarwal; Pooja Sikka

Mullerian adenosarcoma is a rare biphasic malignant neoplasm of the cervix characterized by an admixture of benign epithelial elements and a malignant sarcomatous stromal component, which may be either homologous or heterologous. An aggressive variant of adenosarcoma, mullerian adenosarcoma with sarcomatous overgrowth (MASO) is extremely rare, with only two such cases being reported in the English literature to date. In this report we present a case of MASO of uterine cervix with heterologous elements in a 15-year-old unmarried girl presenting with foul smelling menstrual bleeding and passage of fleshy masses. Because MASO with heterologous elements seems to appear at the earliest stages of reproductive lifespan in women, and have an uncertain malignant potential, gynecologists and pathologists should be aware and think about the possibility of this tumor.


Archives of Gynecology and Obstetrics | 2013

Pregnancy outcome in Budd Chiari Syndrome-a tertiary care centre experience

Neelam Aggarwal; Vanita Suri; Seema Chopra; Pooja Sikka; R. K. Dhiman; Y. K. Chawla

BackgroundPregnancy management is a crucial issue in women with Budd-Chiari Syndrome (BCS) and there are no established guidelines on the management.AimTo report our experience of pregnancy outcome with BCS.Material and MethodsWe report outcome of 13 pregnancies in three women, with favourable outcome after the diagnosis of the condition and its treatment using intervention to bypass obstruction and anticoagulant therapy during pregnancy.ResultsThree women had a total of 13 pregnancies; three after the diagnosis and decompressive treatment of the disease. Disease was diagnosed during index pregnancy in two women. Anticoagulation was given in all the three pregnancies (Robertson et al., Br J Haematol, 132:171–196, 2006).Pregnancies prior to diagnosis and treatment resulted in a live birth.ConclusionPregnancy does not seem to be a contraindication in well treated and controlled BCS. Maternal outcome is good with close multidisciplinary surveillance. Foetal outcome, however, may still be poor due to underlying prothrombotic condition.


Case Reports in Obstetrics and Gynecology | 2012

Management of Pseudohypoparathyroidism Type 1a during Pregnancy and Labor: A Case Report

Anju Singh; Neelam Agarwal; Seema Chopra; Pooja Sikka; Vanita Suri; Bhupesh Kumar; Pinaki Dutta

Pseudohypoparathyroidism is rare during pregnancy and poses multiple challenges related to its diagnosis and management during pregnancy. We hereby report a case of a young woman who was diagnosed to have type 1a pseudohypoparathyroidism. She was managed by multidisciplinary team and had good maternal and perinatal outcome. Management-related issues are discussed here in detail.


Journal of clinical and diagnostic research : JCDR | 2016

Maternal Cardiac Diastolic Dysfunction by Doppler Echocardiography in Women with Preeclampsia

Tanuja Muthyala; Saurabh Mehrotra; Pooja Sikka; Vanita Suri

INTRODUCTION Preeclampsia may lead to heart failure in late pregnancy and early puerperium. Diastolic dysfunction may be the cause of heart failure in these patients. There is paucity of data on diastolic dysfunction in patients with preeclampsia. AIM To assess cardiac diastolic dysfunction in women with preeclampsia by Doppler echocardiography and to correlate severity of dysfunction with severity of preeclampsia. MATERIALS AND METHODS One hundred and fifty nulliparous women in age group of 20-35 years were recruited for the study. Among these, 120 women with preeclampsia were taken as cases and 30 normotensive women as controls. Doppler echocardiography was carried out between 28-36 weeks of gestation in both groups to assess and grade severity of diastolic dysfunction. RESULTS Of 120 women with preeclampsia, 61 had mild preeclampsia and 59 had severe preeclampsia. Diastolic dysfunction was seen in 25(20.8%) cases. Among these, grade I diastolic dysfunction was seen in 40% and the rest 60% had grade II diastolic dysfunction. In the mild preeclampsia group, only 2(3.3%) patients had diastolic dysfunction. Both had grade I dysfunction. Of severe preeclampsia patients, 8(13.6%) had grade I and 15(25.4%) had grade II diastolic dysfunction (p=0.001). None of these progressed to heart failure or pulmonary oedema. Systolic function assessed by left ventricular ejection fraction was normal in all cases. All controls had normal systolic and diastolic functions. CONCLUSION Cardiac diastolic dysfunction occurred in one-fifth of women with preeclampsia. Grade of diastolic dysfunction correlated with the severity of preeclampsia.


Journal of clinical and diagnostic research : JCDR | 2015

A Case Series on Gossypiboma - Varied Clinical Presentations and Their Management.

Seema Chopra; Vanita Suri; Pooja Sikka; Neelam Aggarwal

Retained surgical sponges in the peritoneal cavities are an infrequent operative/surgical complication and an error which is avoidable. The unfortunate situation of forgotten or missed foreign bodies after any surgical procedure may lead to medico legal problems. Though gossypiboma can be found at any operative site but intraperitoneal cavity is the most frequent site reported in literature. Over a period of three years, June 2009-2012, we conducted retrospective analysis of case summaries of eight patients who underwent re-laparotomy for retained surgical sponge at our institute. Pre operative diagnosis was made in 7out of 8 patients, 5 of whom underwent re-laparotomy and one had sponge removed through the caesarean incision, while in another it was removed per-vaginum through the open vault (post hysterectomy). In one patient, gossypiboma was an incidental finding on laparotomy done for adnexal mass. There was no mortality in any of the cases.


Indian Pediatrics | 2018

Improving First-hour Breastfeeding Initiation Rate After Cesarean Deliveries: A Quality Improvement Study

Sankalp Dudeja; Pooja Sikka; Kajal Jain; Vanita Suri; Praveen Kumar

ObjectiveTo improve the rates of first hour initiation of breastfeeding in neonates born through cesarean section from 0 to 80% over 3 months through a quality improvement (QI) process.DesignQuality improvement study.SettingLabor Room-Operation Theatre of a tertiary care hospital.ParticipantsStable newborns ≥35 weeks of gestation born by cesarean section under spinal anesthesia.ProcedureA team of nurses, pediatricians, obstetricians and anesthetists analyzed possible reasons for delayed initiation of breastfeeding by Process flow mapping and Fish bone analysis. Various change ideas were tested through sequential Plan-Do- Study-Act (PDSA) cycles.Outcome measureProportion of eligible babies breast fed within 1 hour of delivery.ResultsThe rate of first-hour initiation of breastfeeding increased from 0% to 93% over the study period. The result was sustained even after the last PDSA cycle, without any additional resources.ConclusionsA QI approach was able to accomplish sustained improvement in first-hour breastfeeding rates in cesarean deliveries.


Tropical Doctor | 2017

Pregnancy outcomes in women with tuberculosis: a 10-year experience from an Indian tertiary care hospital

Seema Chopra; Sujata Siwatch; Neelam Aggarwal; Pooja Sikka; Vanita Suri

Our study sought to determine the characteristics of antenatal patients with tuberculosis (TB) and their pregnancy outcomes. Case records of 50 antenatal women with extra-pulmonary and pulmonary TB at a tertiary centre in India were compared to 150 antenatal women not suffering from TB, for adverse medical, obstetric and neonatal outcomes. The prevalence of TB was 1.16 per 1000 deliveries. Of these, 62% had extra-pulmonary TB. There were two maternal deaths. TB in pregnancy was associated with a five times higher risk of prematurity and three times higher risk of intrauterine growth restriction than the norm. Maternal prognosis depends on the complications of tuberculosis and treatment compliance.

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Vanita Suri

Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research

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Seema Chopra

Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research

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Neelam Aggarwal

Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research

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Kajal Jain

Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research

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Rashmi Bagga

Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research

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Bharti Sharma

Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research

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Praveen Kumar

Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research

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Vanita Jain

Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research

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Anil Bhansali

Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research

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Anju Singh

Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research

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