Characteristics of women with recurrent spontaneous abortions and women with favorable reproductive histories

  • Columbia University ROR

American Journal of Public Health, 76(8), 986-991

DOI 10.2105/ajph.76.8.986 PMID 3728772

Abstract

Women with a history of recurrent spontaneous abortions (repeaters) are compared with women who have had live births and no spontaneous abortions (multiparae) and women who have had live births and only one spontaneous abortion (sporadics) to identify characteristics of the women and their abortuses that might predict subsequent fetal loss. A number of risk factors for recurrent spontaneous abortion have been identified: the loss of a chromosomally normal conception, loss after the first trimester of pregnancy, a delay in conceiving prior to the study pregnancy, a diagnosis of cervical incompetence, and a history of very low birthweight deliveries. The odds ratios associated with being a repeater vary from 1.4 to 5.6 depending on the number of characteristics present.

Topics

recurrent spontaneous abortion characteristics, habitual miscarriage risk factors, chromosomal abnormalities recurrent abortion, autoimmunity recurrent pregnancy loss, reproductive history pregnancy outcome, repeated miscarriage epidemiology, fetal loss recurrent abortion, spontaneous abortion maternal factors, pregnancy loss karyotype analysis, multiparae recurrent aborters comparison
PMID 3728772 3728772 DOI 10.2105/ajph.76.8.986 10.2105/ajph.76.8.986

Cite this article

Strobino, B., Fox, H. E., Kline, J., Stein, Z., Susser, M., & Warburton, D. (1986). Characteristics of women with recurrent spontaneous abortions and women with favorable reproductive histories. *American journal of public health*, *76*(8), 986-991. https://doi.org/10.2105/ajph.76.8.986

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