Compared with oxytocin for labor induction, misoprostol results in a shorter induction-to-delivery interval, a reduction in the rate of cesarean delivery for dystocia, and a decreased use of epidural analgesia. Uterine tachysystole is significantly more common with the use of misoprostol.
Cloacal dysgenesis sequence (CDS) is a rare cause of fetal obstructive uropathy (FOU). The prenatal differentiation of CDS from other FOU is important because CDS is not amenable to in utero surgical intervention in the form of vesicoamniotic shunts. We evaluated the prenatal characteristics of 8 fetuses with CDS, including a pair of monozygotic twins concordant for CDS, in order to identify features that would enable differentiation from other forms of FOU. Pathologic examination in each of the 8 fetuses confirmed characteristic features of absent anal, genital, and urinary orifices associated with a smooth perineum and abnormal phallic development. Associated abnormalities included dysplastic kidneys in 6, hydroureters in 5, intraluminal colonic calcifications in 2, and hypoplastic lungs in 5. Five of these fetuses initially presented as posterior urethral valve syndrome. Six fetuses had megacystis, and 4 underwent vesicocenteses to evaluate urinary electrolytes, all of which were in the ‘poor-risk’ category. Six fetuses were male and 2 female, contradicting earlier claims that CDS occurs only in females. Evaluation of candidates for in utero surgical intervention should include fetal karyotype, and CDS should be suspected in cases of FOU in whom the karyotype reveals a male fetus and sonographic evaluation demonstrates colonic calcifications or abnormal phallic development. Diagnostic microendoscopy may be of benefit in such cases.
Selective termination is employed in multifetal pregnancies, in the presence of an abnormal fetus, in order to improve the prognosis of the normal fetuses. The term elective reduction is used to describe reduction in twin pregnancies for maternal medical conditions, psychological, or socioeconomic reasons. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the factors that influence outcome in such pregnancies. Eighty-two twin pregnancies underwent selective termination (n = 59) or elective reduction (n = 23) over a 10-year period. Early procedures, performed < or = 14 weeks (n = 31), had a pregnancy loss of 9.7% and a mean procedure-to-loss interval of 4.1 +/- 2.8 weeks; mean birthweight was 3299 +/- 395 g in survivors, with a mean gestational age at delivery of 38.4 +/- 2.3 weeks. In comparison, procedures performed > 14 weeks (n = 51) had a pregnancy loss of 7.8%, with a procedure-to-loss interval of 1.2 +/- 0.6 weeks. Mean birthweight was 2577 +/- 999 g, with a mean gestational age at delivery of 35.7 +/- 5 weeks. In conclusion, outcomes were more favourable among patients who underwent a first trimester procedure. The slight increase in pregnancy loss may be attributed to a higher than expected rate of spontaneous abortions in the first trimester, as manifested by the higher procedure-to-loss interval after a first trimester procedure. These facts underscore the importance of early detection of fetal abnormalities in twin pregnancies by ultrasonography and chorionic villus sampling.
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