A decade after the first International Conference on Safe Motherhood, maternal mortality remains very high in most West African countries, even in capital cities. The detection of high risk pregnancies, known as the risk approach, during antenatal consultations has been the basis of most maternal and child health programmes over the last decade. The effectiveness of antenatal care as a tool to prevent or predict obstetric complications is being questioned more and more. In addition to the scarcity of reliable data about the predictivity of most risk factors, the quality of the screening must be questioned. The goal of this study was to assess the frequency of risk factors among a sample of pregnant women attending antenatal care in Niger and to assess the quality of the screening of those risk factors. Overall, 330 pregnant women were enrolled in the study. Each woman was examined twice: the first time by a midwife, the second time by one of the authors but without knowledge of the results of the first consultation. Fifty-five percent of pregnant women had at least one risk factor, 31% had more than one. Ninety-one percent of the risk factors were detected at interview. The following risk factors were not systematically searched for by midwives: height (48.5%), blood pressure (43.6%), glycosuria (40.6%), vaginal bleeding (38.2%), oedema (37.3%), parity (17%), age (16%), previous caesarean section (15.2%), previous stillbirth (15.2%) and previous miscarriages (14.8%). This study has shown that, in Niger, the quality of screening for risk factors during antenatal consultation is poor. In the urban settings where this study took place, lack of personnel, lack of equipment, lack of time and poor compliance by women cannot be made responsible for this situation. While screening of these risk factors continues as policy, the quality of screening must be dramatically improved.
Management of massive rotator cuff tears is a therapeutic challenge in patients younger than 65 years, particularly if still working. According to our hypothesis, choice of the most appropriate treatment option mainly depends on the patient's functional status and on two predictive factors: height of the subacromial space and fatty muscle infiltration. This is a retrospective, multicenter study of a series of 296 patients younger than 65 years, including 176 males and 120 females with extensive or massive cuff tear. Patients had loss of elevation or external rotation or both in 162 cases. Four types of management of massive rotator cuff tear were performed in this study: anatomical watertight repairs, palliative treatments and partial repairs, watertight repairs using flaps or cuff prostheses and reverse shoulder prostheses. At follow-up, the Constant score (65.6+/-3.4) and active elevation (147.7 degrees +/-32 degrees) had significantly improved. Active external rotation with elbow at the side, and acromiohumeral interval (AHI) were unchanged. Work-related injuries, previous surgeries and complications were correlated with a poorer Constant score. At follow-up, the anatomical repair sub-group had a significantly better Constant score than the three other treatment groups but involved patients with unchanged AHI and a low degree of fatty infiltration of the infraspinatus muscle. The reverse shoulder prostheses sub-group showed better outcomes in terms of function benefits. The presence of a long biceps was correlated with the use of a palliative treatment. In the light of the results and literature, an approach to treatment is suggested related to the functional capacity of patients, the AHI and the degree of fatty infiltration of the infraspinatus and subscapularis muscles.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.