Uma Reddy
University of Maryland, Baltimore
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Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2004
Michael V. Muench; Ahmet Baschat; Uma Reddy; Hugh Mighty; Carl P. Weiner; Thomas M. Scalea; Christopher Harman
BACKGROUNDnIn maternal trauma, the Kleihauer-Betke (KB) test has traditionally been used to detect transplacental hemorrhage (TPH), so that Rh-negative women could receive appropriate Rh immune prophylaxis. Reasoning that the magnitude of TPH would reflect uterine injury, we evaluated Kleihauer-Betke testing as an independent predictor of preterm labor (PTL) after maternal trauma.nnnMETHODSnAdmissions to the Shock Trauma Center, University of Maryland, from January 1996 to January 2002, were reviewed. Of 30,362 trauma patients admitted, 166 were pregnant, and 93 of these underwent electronic fetal monitoring. Their records were abstracted for demographics, injury type, three separate trauma scores, documented uterine contractions, PTL (contractions with progressive cervical change), and serious perinatal complications. In 71 cases, transplacental hemorrhage was assessed by maternal KB test.nnnRESULTSnTPH, defined as KB-positive for greater than 0.01 mL of fetal blood in the maternal circulation, occurred in 46 women. Forty-four had documented contractions (25 had overt PTL) and 2 had no contractions. In 25 women with a negative KB test, none had uterine contractions. All patients with contractions or PTL had positive KB tests. By logistic regression, KB test result was the single risk factor associated with PTL (p < 0.001; likelihood ratio, 20.8 for positive KB test). Compared with other sites, abdominal trauma was associated more often with uterine contractions (p < 0.001), PTL (p = 0.001), and a positive KB test (p < 0.001, chi). None of the trauma scoring systems predicted PTL.nnnCONCLUSIONnKleihauer-Betke testing accurately predicts the risk of preterm labor after maternal trauma. Clinical assessment does not. With a negative KB test, posttrauma electronic fetal monitoring duration may be limited safely. With a positive KB test, the significant risk of PTL mandates detailed monitoring. KB testing has important advantages to all maternal trauma victims, regardless of Rh status.
Fetal Diagnosis and Therapy | 2005
Uma Reddy; Ahmet Baschat; Marya G. Zlatnik; Jeffrey A. Towbin; Christopher Harman; Carl P. Weiner
Objective: To first test the hypothesis that the presence of viral nucleic acid in amniotic fluid (AF) is associated with an abnormal pregnancy outcome, and second, to determine if the overall rate of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) positivity and the distribution of virus types vary geographically. Study Design: Cytomegalovirus (CMV), parvovirus B19, adenovirus, enterovirus, herpes simplex virus, Epstein-Barr virus, and respiratory syncytial virus nucleic acids were sought in 423 AF samples obtained for clinical indications: 284 from the East Coast (EC) and 139 from the Midwest (MW). Results: Gestational age at sampling was 19.1 weeks for EC and 20.1 weeks for MW. 13.5% of karyotypically normal singleton pregnancies (57/423) had a positive AF PCR. 11% of AF PCR from the EC while 18% of AF PCR from the MW were positive (p = 0.06). The most commonly detected viruses were adenovirus (77%), enterovirus (12%), and CMV and parvovirus B19 (5% each). Twenty-four percent of sonographically abnormal pregnancies (33/136) had a positive AF PCR compared to only 8.4% (24/287) of normal pregnancies (p < 0.001). Conclusion: A positive AF PCR is associated with an increased rate of fetal structural malformations, intrauterine growth restriction, hydrops and other fetal abnormalities. There were no significant geographic differences in the incidence of AF viral PCR positivity.
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 2008
Jun Zhang; Paul Vanveldhuisen; James Troendle; Uma Reddy; Ware Branch; Jennifer L. Bailit; Michelle A. Kominiarek; Mildred M. Ramirez; Victor Hugo Gonzalez Quintero; Matthew K. Hoffman; Judith U. Hibbard; James Fanning; Ronald T. Burkman; Shoshana Haberman; Helain J. Landy; Kimberly Gregory
/data/revues/00029378/v208i1sS/S0002937812015827/ | 2012
S. Katherine Laughon; Vincenzo Berghella; Rajeshwari Sundaram; Uma Reddy; Zhaohui Lu; Matthew P. Hoffman
/data/revues/00029378/v204i1sS/S0002937810015966/ | 2011
S. Katherine Laughon; Jun Zhang; James Troendle; Uma Reddy
/data/revues/00029378/v204i1sS/S0002937810015917/ | 2011
Matthew P. Hoffman; Jennifer L. Bailit; Isabelle Wilkins; Victor Gonzalez; Kimberly Gregory; Christos Hatjis; Mildred Ramirez; Uma Reddy; James Troendle; Jun Zhang; Ware Branch; Ronald T. Burkman; Paul Van Veldhusien; Li Liu; Michelle A. Kominiarek; Judith U. Hibbard; Helain J. Landy; Shoshana Haberman
/data/revues/00029378/v204i1sS/S0002937810015711/ | 2011
Anthony Sciscione; Jun Zhang; S. Katherine Laughon; Uma Reddy; Matthew P. Hoffman
/data/revues/00029378/v185i6sS/S0002937801804403/ | 2011
Uma Reddy; Marya G. Zlatnik; Ahmet Baschat; Jeffrey Towbin; Christopher Harman; Carl Weiner
/data/revues/00029378/v185i6sS/S0002937801801344/ | 2011
Michael V. Muench; Christopher Harman; Uma Reddy; Ahmet Baschat; Hugh Mighty
/data/revues/00029378/v185i6sS/S0002937801800922/ | 2011
Uma Reddy; Ahmet Baschat; Jeffrey Towbin; Christopher Harman; Carl Weiner