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Dive into the research topics where Victor Hugo Gonzalez-Quintero is active.

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Featured researches published by Victor Hugo Gonzalez-Quintero.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 2010

Contemporary cesarean delivery practice in the United States

Jun Zhang; James Troendle; Uma M. Reddy; S. Katherine Laughon; D. Ware Branch; Ronald T. Burkman; Helain J. Landy; Judith U. Hibbard; Shoshana Haberman; Mildred M. Ramirez; Jennifer L. Bailit; Matthew K. Hoffman; Kimberly D. Gregory; Victor Hugo Gonzalez-Quintero; Michelle A. Kominiarek; Lee A. Learman; Christos Hatjis; Paul Van Veldhuisen

OBJECTIVE To describe contemporary cesarean delivery practice in the United States. STUDY DESIGN Consortium on Safe Labor collected detailed labor and delivery information from 228,668 electronic medical records from 19 hospitals across the United States, 2002-2008. RESULTS The overall cesarean delivery rate was 30.5%. The 31.2% of nulliparous women were delivered by cesarean section. Prelabor repeat cesarean delivery due to a previous uterine scar contributed 30.9% of all cesarean sections. The 28.8% of women with a uterine scar had a trial of labor and the success rate was 57.1%. The 43.8% women attempting vaginal delivery had induction. Half of cesarean for dystocia in induced labor were performed before 6 cm of cervical dilation. CONCLUSION To decrease cesarean delivery rate in the United States, reducing primary cesarean delivery is the key. Increasing vaginal birth after previous cesarean rate is urgently needed. Cesarean section for dystocia should be avoided before the active phase is established, particularly in nulliparous women and in induced labor.


Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2010

Contemporary Patterns of Spontaneous Labor With Normal Neonatal Outcomes

Jun Zhang; Helain J. Landy; D. Ware Branch; Ronald T. Burkman; Shoshana Haberman; Kimberly D. Gregory; Christos Hatjis; Mildred M. Ramirez; Jennifer L. Bailit; Victor Hugo Gonzalez-Quintero; Judith U. Hibbard; Matthew K. Hoffman; Michelle A. Kominiarek; Lee A. Learman; Paul Van Veldhuisen; James Troendle; Uma M. Reddy

OBJECTIVE: To use contemporary labor data to examine the labor patterns in a large, modern obstetric population in the United States. METHODS: Data were from the Consortium on Safe Labor, a multicenter retrospective study that abstracted detailed labor and delivery information from electronic medical records in 19 hospitals across the United States. A total of 62,415 parturients were selected who had a singleton term gestation, spontaneous onset of labor, vertex presentation, vaginal delivery, and a normal perinatal outcome. A repeated-measures analysis was used to construct average labor curves by parity. An interval-censored regression was used to estimate duration of labor, stratified by cervical dilation at admission and centimeter by centimeter. RESULTS: Labor may take more than 6 hours to progress from 4 to 5 cm and more than 3 hours to progress from 5 to 6 cm of dilation. Nulliparous and multiparous women appeared to progress at a similar pace before 6 cm. However, after 6 cm, labor accelerated much faster in multiparous than in nulliparous women. The 95th percentiles of the second stage of labor in nulliparous women with and without epidural analgesia were 3.6 and 2.8 hours, respectively. A partogram for nulliparous women is proposed. CONCLUSION: In a large, contemporary population, the rate of cervical dilation accelerated after 6 cm, and progress from 4 cm to 6 cm was far slower than previously described. Allowing labor to continue for a longer period before 6 cm of cervical dilation may reduce the rate of intrapartum and subsequent repeat cesarean deliveries in the United States. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: III


Early Human Development | 2009

Prenatal depression restricts fetal growth.

Miguel Diego; Tiffany Field; Maria Hernandez-Reif; Saul M. Schanberg; Cynthia M. Kuhn; Victor Hugo Gonzalez-Quintero

OBJECTIVE To identify whether prenatal depression is a risk factor for fetal growth restriction. METHODS Midgestation (18-20 weeks GA) estimated fetal weight and urine cortisol and birthweight and gestational age at birth data were collected on a sample of 40 depressed and 40 non-depressed women. Estimated fetal weight and birthweight data were then used to compute fetal growth rates. RESULTS Depressed women had a 13% greater incidence of premature delivery (Odds ratio (OR)=2.61) and 15% greater incidence of low birthweight (OR=4.75) than non-depressed women. Depressed women also had elevated prenatal cortisol levels (p=.006) and fetuses who were smaller (p=.001) and who showed slower fetal growth rates (p=.011) and lower birthweights (p=.008). Mediation analyses further revealed that prenatal maternal cortisol levels were a potential mediator for the relationship between maternal symptoms of depression and both gestational age at birth and the rate of fetal growth. After controlling for maternal demographic variables, prenatal maternal cortisol levels were associated with 30% of the variance in gestational age at birth and 14% of the variance in the rate of fetal growth. CONCLUSION Prenatal depression was associated with adverse perinatal outcomes, including premature delivery and slower fetal growth rates. Prenatal maternal cortisol levels appear to play a role in mediating these outcomes.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 2010

Maternal and neonatal outcomes by labor onset type and gestational age

Jennifer L. Bailit; Kimberly D. Gregory; Uma M. Reddy; Victor Hugo Gonzalez-Quintero; Judith U. Hibbard; Mildred M. Ramirez; D. Ware Branch; Ronald T. Burkman; Shoshana Haberman; Christos Hatjis; Matthew K. Hoffman; Michelle A. Kominiarek; Helain J. Landy; Lee A. Learman; James Troendle; Paul Van Veldhuisen; Isabelle Wilkins; Liping Sun; Jun Zhang

OBJECTIVE We sought to determine maternal and neonatal outcomes by labor onset type and gestational age. STUDY DESIGN We used electronic medical records data from 10 US institutions in the Consortium on Safe Labor on 115,528 deliveries from 2002 through 2008. Deliveries were divided by labor onset type (spontaneous, elective induction, indicated induction, unlabored cesarean). Neonatal and maternal outcomes were calculated by labor onset type and gestational age. RESULTS Neonatal intensive care unit admissions and sepsis improved with each week of gestational age until 39 weeks (P < .001). After adjusting for complications, elective induction of labor was associated with a lower risk of ventilator use (odds ratio [OR], 0.38; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.28-0.53), sepsis (OR, 0.36; 95% CI, 0.26-0.49), and neonatal intensive care unit admissions (OR, 0.52; 95% CI, 0.48-0.57) compared to spontaneous labor. The relative risk of hysterectomy at term was 3.21 (95% CI, 1.08-9.54) with elective induction, 1.16 (95% CI, 0.24-5.58) with indicated induction, and 6.57 (95% CI, 1.78-24.30) with cesarean without labor compared to spontaneous labor. CONCLUSION Some neonatal outcomes improved until 39 weeks. Babies born with elective induction are associated with better neonatal outcomes compared to spontaneous labor. Elective induction may be associated with an increased hysterectomy risk.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 2010

The maternal body mass index: a strong association with delivery route.

Michelle A. Kominiarek; Paul Vanveldhuisen; Judith U. Hibbard; Helain J. Landy; Shoshana Haberman; Lee A. Learman; Isabelle Wilkins; Jennifer L. Bailit; Ware Branch; Ronald T. Burkman; Victor Hugo Gonzalez-Quintero; Kimberly D. Gregory; Christos Hatjis; Matthew K. Hoffman; Mildred M. Ramirez; Uma M. Reddy; James Troendle; Jun Zhang

OBJECTIVE We sought to assess body mass index (BMI) effect on cesarean risk during labor. STUDY DESIGN The Consortium on Safe Labor collected electronic data from 228,668 deliveries. Women with singletons > or = 37 weeks and known BMI at labor admission were analyzed in this cohort study. Regression analysis generated relative risks for cesarean stratifying for parity and prior cesarean while controlling for covariates. RESULTS Of the 124,389 women, 14.0% had cesareans. Cesareans increased with increasing BMI for nulliparas and multiparas with and without a prior cesarean. Repeat cesareans were performed in > 50% of laboring women with a BMI > 40 kg/m(2). The risk for cesarean increased as BMI increased for all subgroups, P < .001. The risk for cesarean increased by 5%, 2%, and 5% for nulliparas and multiparas with and without a prior cesarean, respectively, for each 1-kg/m(2) increase in BMI. CONCLUSION Admission BMI is significantly associated with delivery route in term laboring women. Parity and prior cesarean are other important predictors.


Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2011

Characteristics Associated With Severe Perineal and Cervical Lacerations During Vaginal Delivery

Helain J. Landy; S. Katherine Laughon; Jennifer L. Bailit; Michelle A. Kominiarek; Victor Hugo Gonzalez-Quintero; Mildred M. Ramirez; Shoshana Haberman; Judith U. Hibbard; Isabelle Wilkins; D. Ware Branch; Ronald T. Burkman; Kimberly D. Gregory; Matthew K. Hoffman; Lee A. Learman; Christos Hatjis; Paul Vanveldhuisen; Uma M. Reddy; James Troendle; Liping Sun; Jun Zhang

OBJECTIVE: To characterize potentially modifiable risk factors for third- or fourth-degree perineal lacerations and cervical lacerations in a contemporary U.S. obstetric practice. METHODS: The Consortium on Safe Labor collected electronic medical records from 19 hospitals within 12 institutions (228,668 deliveries from 2002 to 2008). Information on patient characteristics, prenatal complications, labor and delivery data, and maternal and neonatal outcomes were collected. Only women with successful vaginal deliveries of cephalic singletons at 34 weeks of gestation or later were included; we excluded data from sites lacking information about lacerations at delivery and deliveries complicated by shoulder dystocia; 87,267 and 71,170 women were analyzed for third- or fourth-degree and cervical lacerations, respectively. Multivariable logistic regressions were used to adjust for other factors. RESULTS: Third- or fourth-degree lacerations occurred in 2,516 women (2,223 nulliparous [5.8%], 293 [0.6%] multiparous) and cervical lacerations occurred in 536 women (324 nulliparous [1.1%], 212 multiparous [0.5%]). Risks for third- or fourth-degree lacerations included nulliparity (7.2-fold risk), being Asian or Pacific Islander, increasing birth weight, operative vaginal delivery, episiotomy, and longer second stage of labor. Increasing body mass index was associated with fewer lacerations. Risk factors for cervical lacerations included young maternal age, vacuum vaginal delivery, and oxytocin use among multiparous women, and cerclage regardless of parity. CONCLUSION: Our large cohort of women with severe obstetric lacerations reflects contemporary obstetric practices. Nulliparity and episiotomy use are important risk factors for third- or fourth-degree lacerations. Cerclage increases the risk for cervical lacerations. Many identified risk factors may not be modifiable. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: II


American Journal of Perinatology | 2010

Excessive weight gain among obese women and pregnancy outcomes.

Amy Alicia Flick; Kathleen F. Brookfield; Lesley de la Torre; Carmen Maria Tudela; Lunthita Duthely; Victor Hugo Gonzalez-Quintero

We evaluated pregnancy outcomes in obese women with excessive weight gain during pregnancy. A retrospective study was performed on all obese women. Outcomes included rates of preeclampsia (PEC), gestational diabetes, cesarean delivery (CD), preterm delivery, low birth weight, very low birth weight, macrosomia, 5-minute Apgar score of <7, and neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) admission and were stratified by body mass index (BMI) groups class I (BMI 30 to 35.9 kg/m(2)), class II (36 to 39.9 kg/m(2)), and class III (>or=40 kg/m(2)). Gestational weight change was abstracted from the mothers medical chart and was divided into four categories: weight loss, weight gain of up to 14.9 pounds, weight gain of 15 to 24.9 pounds, and weight gain of more than 25 pounds. A total 20,823 obese women were eligible for the study. Univariate analysis revealed higher rates of preeclampsia, gestational diabetes, Cesarean deliveries, preterm deliveries, low birth weight, macrosomia, and NICU admission in class II and class III obese women when compared with class I women. When different patterns of weight gain were used as in the logistic regression model, rates of PEC and CD were increased. Excessive weight gain among obese women is associated with adverse outcomes with a higher risk as BMI increases.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 2003

Antenatal factors associated with significant birth weight discordancy in twin gestations.

Victor Hugo Gonzalez-Quintero; Barbara Luke; Mary Jo O'Sullivan; Ruta Misiunas; Elaine Anderson; Clark Nugent; Frank R. Witter; Jill Mauldin; Roger B. Newman; Mary E. D'Alton; David A. Grainger; George R. Saade; Gary D.V. Hankins; George Macones

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to evaluate factors that are associated with significant birth weight discordancy. STUDY DESIGN As a part of an ongoing collaborative study of twins, maternal and fetal data were obtained from the medical records of twin gestations at eight medical centers. The study population was divided into groups by difference in birth weight discordancy (>or=20%, >or=25%, and >or=30%) RESULTS Severe birth weight discordancy was associated with fetal growth deceleration by 20 to 28 weeks (adjusted odds ratio, 4.90; 95% CI, 3.15-7.64) and between 28 weeks to birth (adjusted odds ratio, 3.48; 95% CI, 1.72-7.06). Antenatal bleeding (adjusted odds ratio, 1.86; 95% CI, 1.08-3.21), preeclampsia (adjusted odds ratio, 1.70, 95% CI, 1.21-2.41), and monochorionicity (adjusted odds ratio, 2.35, 95% CI, 11.71-3.23) were also associated with birth weight discordancy. CONCLUSION These data demonstrate the importance of the early diagnosis of placental chorionicity, because monochorionicity is associated with a 2-fold increase in birth weight discordancy in twin gestations.


Journal of Womens Health | 2008

Antenatal Factors Predicting Subsequent Need for Insulin Treatment in Women with Gestational Diabetes

Victor Hugo Gonzalez-Quintero; Niki Istwan; Debbie J. Rhea; Carmen Maria Tudela; Amy Alicia Flick; Lesley de la Torre; Gary Stanziano

OBJECTIVE To identify characteristics indicative of subsequent requirement of insulin in patients with gestational diabetes (GDM). METHODS Identified from a database were patients with GDM not receiving insulin or oral hypoglycemic agents at enrollment for outpatient education and surveillance. Maternal characteristics were compared between patients achieving glycemic control with diet and those requiring insulin. Cox proportional hazards regression was used to assess multiple effects of significant univariate factors. RESULTS Data from 2365 patients were analyzed. Patients requiring insulin were more likely to be multiparous, obese, have a history of GDM, be diagnosed at <28 weeks of gestation, and have a fasting blood glucose of >95 mg/dL, a glucose tolerance test 3-hour blood glucose of >140 mg/dL, and a glycosylated hemoglobin (A1c) of >or=6% at diagnosis of GDM. CONCLUSIONS Laboratory values at diagnosis of GDM were the strongest indicators of subsequent need for insulin treatment. Patients with fasting blood glucose of >95 mg/dL and A1c values >or=6% at diagnosis of GDM should receive close surveillance of daily blood glucose.


Journal of Perinatology | 2007

Antenatal exposure to magnesium sulfate and the incidence of patent ductus arteriosus in extremely low birth weight infants

T del Moral; Victor Hugo Gonzalez-Quintero; Nelson Claure; Silvia Vanbuskirk; E. Bancalari

Objective:Magnesium sulfate (MgSO4) is the most commonly used tocolytic agent in the US and is also employed as a prophylactic agent against seizures in pre-eclamptic women. MgSO4 crosses the placenta and its concentration in the newborn usually exceeds that of maternal levels. The purpose of this study was to explore the relationship between antenatal exposure to MgSO4 and the incidence of patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) in extremely low birth weight infants.Study design:A total of 954 neonates with birth weights between 500 and 1000 g, born at the University of Miami/Jackson Memorial Hospital between January 1995 and December 2004 and surviving for more than 3 days, were followed until death or discharge from the hospital. The incidence of PDA in infants exposed to MgSO4 was compared with those not exposed and comparisons were also made between infants exposed to different maternal doses of MgSO4.Results:The incidence of PDA was significantly higher in the group of infants exposed to MgSO4 compared with the unexposed control group (67 vs. 60%, P<0.018). When stratified by gestational age the differences were significant only in the group of infants with a gestational age of ⩾26 weeks (58 vs. 49%, P<0.039). Logistic regression analysis to adjust for co-variables indicated an increased risk of PDA with higher doses of MgSO4 (odds ratio 1.33 confidence interval (CI) 1.12 to 1.58, per 50 g of MgSO4).Conclusion:Antenatal exposure to MgSO4 is associated with a higher risk of PDA in extremely low birth weight infants and this effect is more significant and dose-related in more mature infants.

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Barbara Luke

Michigan State University

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Gary Stanziano

University of California

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Debbie Rhea

University of Kentucky

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Roger B. Newman

Medical University of South Carolina

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