Shirley G. Driscoll
Brigham and Women's Hospital
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Featured researches published by Shirley G. Driscoll.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1988
James L. Mills; Joe L. Simpson; Shirley G. Driscoll; Lois Jovanovic-Peterson; Margot I. Van Allen; Jerome H. Aarons; Boyd E. Metzger; Frederick R. Bieber; Robert H. Knopp; Lewis B. Holmes; Charles M. Peterson; Marcia Withiam-Wilson; Zane Brown; Carole Ober; Ernest E. Harley; Trevor A. Macpherson; Anne Duckles; Eberhard Mueller-Heubach
Whether pregnant women with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus have an increased risk of spontaneous abortion is controversial. To address this question, we enrolled 386 women with insulin-dependent diabetes and 432 women without diabetes before or within 21 days after conception and followed both groups prospectively. Sixty-two diabetic women (16.1 percent) and 70 control women (16.2 percent) had pregnancy losses (odds ratio, 0.99; 95 percent confidence interval, 0.67 to 1.46). After adjustment for known risk factors for spontaneous abortion, the rate was still not significantly higher in the diabetic group (odds ratio, 0.91; 95 percent confidence interval, 0.59 to 1.40). Nonetheless, among the diabetic women, most of whom had good metabolic control, those who had spontaneous abortions had higher fasting and postprandial glucose levels in the first trimester than those whose pregnancies continued to delivery (P = 0.01 for fasting glucose levels and P = 0.005 for postprandial levels). In the small subgroup of diabetic women with poor control, who had elevated values for glycosylated hemoglobin in the first trimester, each increase of 1 SD above the normal range was associated with an increase of 3.1 percent in the rate of pregnancy loss (95 percent confidence interval, 0.6 to 5.6). We conclude that diabetic women with good metabolic control are no more likely than nondiabetic women to lose a pregnancy, but that diabetic women with elevated blood glucose and glycosylated hemoglobin levels in the first trimester have a significantly increased risk of having a spontaneous abortion.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1976
Lewis B. Holmes; Shirley G. Driscoll; Leonard Atkins
We classified 106 stillborn and live-born infants with anencephaly, meningomyelocele, meningocele and encephalocele according to the recognized causes of these malformations. Six different causes were identified, including both genetic and nongenetic disorders; 12 per cent had nongenetic disorders, a chromosome abnormality, or an encephalocele as part of the autosomal recessive Meckel syndrome. Therefore, for this 12 per cent genetic counseling normally provided for isolated anencephaly, meningomyelocele or encephalocele would have been incorrect. If all infants were considered together regardless of cause, the precurrence and recurrence rates of similar malformations in the sibs were 5.2 and 1.7 per cent respectively. However, if infants with other disorders, especially the Meckel syndrome, were excluded, the precurrence and recurrence rates for isolated anencephaly, meningomyelocele and encephalocele among white infants were only 1.7 per cent and 0 per cent. These rates are much lower than the risk of 5 per cent currently being used in genetic counseling in the United States.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1984
Ruth B. Kundsin; Shirley G. Driscoll; Richard R. Monson; Ching Yeh; Stella Biano; William D. Cochran
Abstract We investigated the presence of ureaplasmas, mycoplasmas, chlamydiae, fungi, aerobic and anaerobic bacteria, and cytomegalovirus in fetal membranes and evaluated their association with perinatal morbidity and mortality. We cultured 801 placentas from three groups of subjects (144 who died in the perinatal period, 452 neonates admitted to the intensive-care unit, and 205 controls). Ureaplasma urealyticum, Mycoplasma hominis, or both were isolated from 21 per cent of placentas of premature and term infants who died in the perinatal period, 25 per cent of those admitted to intensive care, and 11 per cent of controls. Gestational age and birth weight were inversely related to isolation of ureaplasma, and chorioamnionitis was positively related to isolation. The presence of ureaplasmas in the placenta suggests the transcervical migration of these microorganisms from the lower genitourinary tract. These data show a strong association between ureaplasma infection of the placenta and low birth weight of ...
Science | 1967
Ruth B. Kundsin; Shirley G. Driscoll; Pen-ming L. Ming
A strain of mycoplasma not previously described has been isolated from the chorion, decidua, and amnion of a patient who sustained a spontaneous abortion during the middle trimester. The fetal membranes exhibited an inflammatory reaction, but no evidence of other infectious agents, bacterial or viral, was noted. The T strain identified is not a classical mycoplasma; it differs in growth and nutritional requirements from the T strains previously characterized.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1975
Paul A. Shurin; Susan Alpert; Bernard Rosner; Shirley G. Driscoll; Yhu-Hsiung Lee; William M. McCormack; Bernardo A.G. Santamarina; Edward H. Kass
To study the role of Mycoplasma hominis and T-mycoplasmas (Ureaplasma urealyticum) in chorioamnionitis, we obtained culture from 249 puerperal women and their babies. The placentas were examined histologically. Infants whose placentas showed inflammation (chorioamnionitis) had cultures positive for T-mycoplasmas more frequently (37.5 per cent) than those with normal placentas (19.0 per cent) (P = 0.021). Colonization with M. hominis was found in 16.0 per cent of the babies and was not significantly associated with chorioamnionitis. Material colonization with mycoplasmas was more frequent (73.4 per cent) and was not correlated with placental inflammation. We conclude that a substantial proportion of cases of chorioamnionitis may be caused by prenatal infection with T-mycoplasmas. The fact that these organisms are not highly virulent could explain the frequent finding of inflammed placentas from otherwise normal pregnacies. No adverse clinical effects of the placental lesions or of mycoplasmal colonization could be detected in this small study.
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1985
Ross S. Berkowitz; Daniel W. Cramer; Marilyn R. Bernstein; Sally Cassells; Shirley G. Driscoll; Donald P. Goldstein
Demographic, reproductive, and dietary histories for 90 white women with complete molar pregnancy were compared in a multivariate analysis with those of 90 parous controls matched to cases by residence, birth year, and race. Women with molar pregnancy were more likely to have been born outside North America (relative risk = 1.9, p = 0.05), were more likely to have been past age 30 at time of their molar pregnancy (relative risk = 1.6, p = 0.05), and were more likely to have diets deficient in the vitamin A precursor carotene. Women with dietary scores for carotene above the control median had a relative risk for molar pregnancy of 0.6 (p = 0.02). In addition, there was a significant trend for decreasing risk for molar pregnancy with increasing consumption of carotene. Although other nutritional deficiencies in patients with complete molar pregnancy may exist, carotene is a biologically plausible candidate for a nutritional risk factor that could explain the geographic distribution of molar pregnancy.
Human Pathology | 1986
Beth R. Schwartz; Janice M. Lage; Barbara R. Pober; Shirley G. Driscoll
This paper describes two cases of an unusual renal abnormality discovered in anuric siblings (one male, one female) who were born at 36 and 34 weeks of gestation and died of systemic complications secondary to severe pulmonary hypoplasia shortly after birth. Both gestations were complicated by marked oligohydramnios. Antenatal ultrasound examinations showed slightly enlarged kidneys in the first case and normal kidneys in the second case, with no evidence of hydronephrosis or cystic disease in either. With the exception of enlargement of the first infants kidneys, autopsies revealed grossly unremarkable kidneys and ureters. Microscopy, however, demonstrated increased glomerulogenesis with normal glomeruli and global immaturity of renal tubules and ducts without concomitant features of dysplasia. Immunoperoxidase staining for epithelial membrane antigen revealed the immaturity or complete absence of proximal convoluted tubules. This precise constellation of findings had not been described previously. One other similar family has been documented in a report implicating genetic factors. In the present cases, the possibility of a cocaine-associated etiology is also addressed.
Science | 1970
A. Espinosa De Los Monteros; Shirley G. Driscoll; J. Steinke
Pancreases were obtained from five human fetuses 12 to 16 weeks old. The islets of Langerhans were isolated with collagenase, and then incubated with buffer, glucose, tolbutamide, or glucagon added to the medium. The insulin released into the medium was measured by immunoassay. Glucagon produced the only significant increase above base line; glucose and tolbutamide failed to enhance secretion of insulin. The data suggest that isolated human fetal islets of this gestational age develop responsiveness to glucagon earlier than to glucose or tolbutamide.
Human Pathology | 1985
Mahpareh Mostoufi-Zadeh; Lawrence M. Weiss; Shirley G. Driscoll
Autopsies were performed in 40 cases of nonimmune hydrops fetalis during the period from 1975 to 1983. In 25 cases specific anatomic diagnoses, including hematologic disorders, infections, chromosomal abnormalities, congenital anomalies, and tumors, were made. In the majority the diagnosis of hydrops fetalis was made prenatally by ultrasonography. The mean gestational age at delivery was 30 weeks; 23 infants were stillborn, and 17 died during the neonatal period. Body weights were consistently increased; peripheral edema and ascites were present in all cases and pleural effusions in all but two cases. Hepatosplenomegaly, cardiomegaly, and pulmonary hypoplasia were frequent findings. The most consistent microscopic changes involved endocrine organs. Islet cell hyperplasia and Leydig cell hyperplasia were common, and thyroid hyperplasia was found occasionally. The fetal zone of the adrenal cortex was often thick and composed of swollen, vacuolated cells. Enhanced extramedullary erythropoiesis was observed in all cases. Thirty-nine placentas were examined; 34 were edematous (mean weight, 547 g), with villous edema, excess erythroblastemia and normoblastemia, and occasional intravillous hematopoiesis. Nonimmune hydrops fetalis has a range of known causes. Thorough autopsy, including placental examination, is the most useful approach for determining the etiology. In 23 cases the probable or possible cause was established in this manner. Antibody studies should also be performed in all cases to exclude an immunologic etiology. Synthesis of clinical, serologic, and pathologic data offers prospects for rational management and prediction of recurrence.
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1978
Liane Deligdisch; Shirley G. Driscoll; Donald P. Goldstein
GTN were evaluated histologically in reference to biologic behavior and response to chemotherapy. GTN requiring more intensive, multiple drug chemotherapy usually exhibited increased mitotic activity, nuclear atypias, compact growth of cytotrophoblast, and little maturation, as compared to lesions that responded more favorably. Fibrinoid at the interface of tumor and host tissues was associated with a favorable response to drug therapy. Patients requiring more intensive chemotherapy were more likely to present with distant metastases and high levels of hCG prior to treatment and to reach remission only after many courses of treatment. The clinical and morphologic features of fatal cases suggest that these represented the extreme of a biologic continuum, with collapse of defense mechanisms despite chemotherapy. The early recognition by the pathologist of those lesions that may be resistant to chemotherapy is important to the clinician in selection of an optimal treatment protocol.