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International, collaborative experience of 1789 patients having multifetal pregnancy reduction: a plateauing of risks and outcomes
Evans, M I; Dommergues, M; Wapner, R J; Goldberg, J D; Lynch, L; Zador, I E; Carpenter, R J Jr; Timor-Tritsch, I; Brambati, B; Nicolaides, K H; Dumez, Y; Monteagudo, A; Johnson, M P; Golbus, M S; Tului, L; Polak, S M; Berkowitz, R L
OBJECTIVE: To develop the most up-to-date, complete data base of multifetal pregnancy reduction (MFPR) from cases, and to provide the best counseling for couples with multifetal pregnancies. METHODS: From nine centers in five countries, 1789 completed MFPR cases were collected and outcomes evaluated. Pregnancy losses were defined as through 24 weeks and deliveries categorized in groups of 25-28, 29-32, 33-36, and 37 or more weeks. RESULTS: Overall, the pregnancy loss rate was 11.7% but varied from a low of 7.6% for triplets to twins and increased with each additional starting number to 22.9% for sextuplets or higher. Early premature deliveries (25-28 weeks) were 4.5% and varied with starting number. Loss rates by finishing number were highest for triplets and lowest for twins, but gestational age at delivery was highest for singletons. CONCLUSIONS: Multifetal pregnancy reduction has been shown to be a safe and effective method to improve outcome in multifetal pregnancies. Outcomes are worse with higher-order gestations and support the need for continued vigilance of fertility therapy
PMID: 8796803
ISSN: 1071-5576
CID: 76523
Ultrasonography of the prenatal and neonatal brain
Cohen, Harris L; Monteagudo, Ana; Timor-Tritsch, Ilan E
Stamford, Conn. : Appleton & Lange, c1996
Extent: xi, 418 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 29 cm
ISBN: 0838590748
CID: 692
The psychological effects of multifetal pregnancy reduction
McKinney, M; Downey, J; Timor-Tritsch, I
OBJECTIVE: To study the psychological effects of multifetal pregnancy reduction. DESIGN AND SETTING: Hour-long semistructured telephone interviews with both multifetal pregnancy reduction patients and control subjects. PATIENTS: Forty-two multifetal pregnancy reduction patients were contacted within 1 year of undergoing the procedure. Forty-four control subjects had become pregnant after infertility evaluation or treatment but conceived only a single fetus or twins and thus did not consider fetal termination. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Standardized measures of depressive disorder and current psychiatric symptoms, as well as questions about emotional reactions to multifetal pregnancy reduction. RESULTS: Reduction patients who were pregnant or postpartum at the time of the interview (n = 34) were no more likely than pregnant or postpartum controls (n = 34) to report episodes of depression or high psychiatric symptom levels. The same proportion (14.7%) of both reduction patients and controls with a successful pregnancy outcome met criteria for an episode of major depressive disorder occurring during the 9 months before the interview. In contrast, the 8 reduction patients who spontaneously aborted the entire pregnancy and the 10 controls who spontaneously aborted reported significantly higher rates of the full depressive syndrome. CONCLUSIONS: Multifetal pregnancy reduction is experienced as stressful and distressing. However, when pregnancy outcome is successful, the medical intervention does not put women at significant risk for affective illness or elevated levels of psychiatric symptoms
PMID: 7789580
ISSN: 0015-0282
CID: 76524
Transvaginal ultrasonography in the office: the eye on the finger of the gynecologist [Letter]
Timor-Tritsch, I E
PMID: 7619157
ISSN: 0002-9378
CID: 76525
Characterization of placenta accreta using transvaginal sonography and color Doppler imaging
Lerner, J P; Deane, S; Timor-Tritsch, I E
The safe use of transvaginal sonography in patients with placenta previa has been confirmed, and has revolutionized precise placental localization. The aim of our study was to evaluate the efficacy of transvaginal sonography and color-coded blood flow in the prediction of placenta accreta. Twenty-one patients with persistent placenta previa were scanned using transvaginal sonography and color-coded flow. Suspicion for placenta accreta consisted of total placenta previa at term with several placental lacunae exhibiting marked or turbulent blood flow, as seen with color Doppler transvaginal sonography from within the placenta, extending into the surrounding tissues. Five of the patients exhibited sonographic placental patterns suspicious for placenta accreta and one patient exhibited placental and cervical blood flow described as lacunar. Five Cesarean hysterectomies were performed for placenta accreta. Every placenta accreta was correctly diagnosed sonographically by the use of color flow studies. One patient with suspicion of placenta accreta delivered at another institution, a Cesarean hysterectomy was performed, and the pathology was confirmed. The one placenta previa exhibiting turbulent lacunar flow in the cervical area only was not confirmed to be an accreta at Cesarean section, although hemostasis was difficult at the placental bed. The remaining 15 patients with placenta previa and who on sonography were not suspicious for placenta accreta underwent uncomplicated Cesarean section. Transvaginal sonography and color Doppler imaging improve the diagnostic accuracy in the prediction of placenta accreta in patients with persistent placenta previa. A pattern of turbulent blood flow extending from the placenta into the surrounding tissues should alert the physician to the possibility of placenta accreta
PMID: 7788495
ISSN: 0960-7692
CID: 76526
Ultrasound in gynecology
Goldstein, Steven R.; Timor-Tritsch, Ilan E
New York : Churchill Livingstone, 1995
Extent: xv, 321 p., [12] p. of plates : ill. (some col.) ; 29 cm
ISBN: n/a
CID: 517
Sonographic neuroembryology of the central nervous system
Monteagudo, A; Tharakan, T; Timor-Tritsch, I E
In the last decade, strong emphasis has been placed on the structural evaluation of the fetus. Central nervous system anomalies are among the most common malformations affecting the developing fetus. As ultrasound equipment has improved, our demand for more resolute pictures has increased. The high-frequency, transvaginal ultrasound probe allows us to access the fetal fontanel and produce high-resolution fetal brain images. When such transducer probes are aligned with the fetal anterior fontanel (much like neonatal brain scans), clear and clinically useful images in the sagittal and coronal planes are generated. In this article, we review the technique of transvaginal transfontanel scanning, discuss pertinent neuroembryology, and apply this information to the sonographic diagnosis of neural tube defects
PMID: 7858374
ISSN: 1048-9886
CID: 76527
Transvaginal ultrasonographic evaluation of the cervix before labor: presence of cervical wedging is associated with shorter duration of induced labor
Boozarjomehri, F; Timor-Tritsch, I; Chao, C R; Fox, H E
OBJECTIVE: Our purpose was to test the hypothesis that transvaginal ultrasonographically determined characteristics of the cervix are associated with duration of induced labor. STUDY DESIGN: Fifty-three patients scheduled for induction of labor underwent transvaginal ultrasonography and digital cervical examinations before labor induction. Cox proportional-hazards multiple regression analysis was performed to determine the variables that made a significant contribution to the prediction of latent-phase and total labor duration. In the analysis the possible confounding effects of exogenous prostaglandin, previous vaginal delivery, and previous termination of pregnancy were controlled. RESULTS: Latent-phase and total labor duration were significantly associated with the presence of cervical wedging noted on transvaginal ultrasonography and administration of prostaglandin but not with the result of digital examination of cervical effacement or dilatation. Latent-phase duration was also associated with cervical length measured by transvaginal ultrasonography. The presence of wedging was significantly associated with shorter latent (15.9 +/- 1.7 vs 34.1 +/- 3.8 hours, p = 0.0001) and total (22.0 +/- 1.8 vs 38.3 +/- 3.6 hours, p = 0.0001) labor length. CONCLUSION: The presence of wedging and decreased cervical length observed by transvaginal ultrasonography is associated with a shorter duration of induced labor and may be useful in the evaluation of induction candidates
PMID: 7943075
ISSN: 0002-9378
CID: 72464
Fetal breathing characteristics and postnatal outcome in cases of congenital diaphragmatic hernia
Badalian, S S; Fox, H E; Chao, C R; Timor-Tritsch, I E; Stolar, C J
OBJECTIVE: Our purpose was to determine characteristics of fetal breathing activity by recording fetal nasal fluid flow velocity in cases of congenital diaphragmatic hernia. STUDY DESIGN: Fetal breathing-related nasal fluid flow was studied in 47 patients at 34 to 41 weeks of gestation, 16 cases of antenatally diagnosed congenital diaphragmatic hernia and 31 cases of uncomplicated pregnancy. The examination was performed by ultrasonography combined with color-flow and spectral Doppler analysis. An average of 25 breath cycles from each case was determined for each of the following timing parameters: breath-to-breath interval, time of inspiration, time of expiration, and ratio of time of inspiration and time of expiration. RESULTS: In all cases with uncomplicated pregnancy fetal breathing-related nasal fluid flow was seen at the level of the nose, and the timing components of this flow were determined as control values. In two cases with diaphragmatic hernia no perinasal flow was demonstrated, although fetal breathing movements observed as chest wall movements were present. The other 14 cases with congenital diaphragmatic hernia who demonstrated perinasal flow had the following postnatal outcome: one stillbirth, five neonatal deaths (group I), and eight survived and were discharged (group II). The study revealed that the time of expiration (in milliseconds) in group II (493.2 +/- 34.3 SEM) was significantly (p = 0.0030) shorter than in group I (653.4 +/- 38.4) and in cases of uncomplicated pregnancy (633.6 +/- 18.5). The value of the time of inspiration/time of expiration ratio in group II was approximately 15% higher than in group I and approximately 30% higher than in cases of uncomplicated pregnancies. CONCLUSIONS: Observation of fetal breathing-related nasal fluid flow velocity in cases of antenatally diagnosed congenital diaphragmatic hernia provides a rationale for the hypothesis that time of expiration and the time of inspiration/time of expiration ratio may be useful in the prediction of postnatal outcome. We speculate that the changes in the group of survivors may represent a compensatory phenomenon by causing intermittent changes in the volume of fluid within the lungs
PMID: 7943111
ISSN: 0002-9378
CID: 76528
New technologies in obstetrics and gynecology: the test of time [Comment]
Timor-Tritsch, I E; Condrea, A
PMID: 12797140
ISSN: 0960-7692
CID: 76529