Jing Wang , Lingfei Ge , Kai Zhou , Yi Jiang , Mengqi Pang , Jiaqi Wang , Yuxian Zhu , Lingli Zhu , Xiaoxiao Jin , Zeying Chai , Tao Hsin Tung , Hongping Lu , Bo Shen , Lingzhi Zheng
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background
People are very concerned about the adverse effects of Omicron infection on delivery modes, duration of labor, and the postpartum status of pregnant women and neonates.
Methods
382 pregnant women (Omicron group: 136 cases; non-Omicron group: 246 cases) giving birth in our hospital were collected, demographic characteristics, vaccination, clinical manifestation and medication, delivery outcomes of pregnant women and neonates were recorded. Delivery outcomes were compared between the Omicron and non-Omicron groups, acute infection and non-acute infection groups to explore the relationship between adverse delivery outcomes and Omicron infection.
Results
Pregnant women in the Omicron group had a longer hospitalization time (6.3 ± 3.6 days vs.5.5 ± 2.3 days), more 2-hour postpartum hemorrhage (291.7 ± 104.9 mL vs.262.7 ± 91.2 mL) and higher neonatal-pediatric transfer rate (20.6 % vs. 2.8 %), which might be associated with fetal distress, prenatal fever and pneumonia/respiratory distress. Neonates transferred to pediatrics due to jaundice were unique in the Omicron group. Fever-pregnant women have a more prolonged second stage of labor and hospital stay while coughing or expectoration ones have a shorter third stage of labor. Delivery outcomes did not differ whether the infected pregnant women were in the acute phase and whether to use antipyretics.
Conclusion
Omicron infection can increase the 2-hour postpartum hemorrhage volume and the neonatal-pediatric transfer rate. The symptoms can affect the duration of labor and hospital stay. However, whether the infected pregnant women are in the acute phase or use antipyretics do not affect the delivery outcome.
期刊介绍:
Travel Medicine and Infectious Disease
Publication Scope:
Publishes original papers, reviews, and consensus papers
Primary theme: infectious disease in the context of travel medicine
Focus Areas:
Epidemiology and surveillance of travel-related illness
Prevention and treatment of travel-associated infections
Malaria prevention and treatment
Travellers' diarrhoea
Infections associated with mass gatherings
Migration-related infections
Vaccines and vaccine-preventable disease
Global policy/regulations for disease prevention and control
Practical clinical issues for travel and tropical medicine practitioners
Coverage:
Addresses areas of controversy and debate in travel medicine
Aims to inform guidelines and policy pertinent to travel medicine and the prevention of infectious disease
Publication Features:
Offers a fast peer-review process
Provides early online publication of accepted manuscripts
Aims to publish cutting-edge papers