Early signs and symptoms of preterm labor

American journal of obstetrics and gynecology, 162(5), 1150-1153

DOI 10.1016/0002-9378(90)90004-q PMID 2140235 Source

Abstract

Patient and staff education concerning the subtle signs and symptoms that precede a clinical diagnosis of preterm labor have not been well established. Therefore we interviewed 100 patients for the presence or absence of various symptoms and signs during the 7 days preceding diagnosis of preterm labor. An additional 100 patients without preterm labor matched for gestation were chosen at random as control subjects. A history of increased uterine contractions, menstrual cramps, constant backache, constant pelvic pressure, increased amount and consistency and color change of vaginal discharge, and increased frequency of urination were present with a statistically significant higher frequency in patients with preterm labor compared with controls. Twenty-nine percent of patients did not report any uterine contractions and only half described them as painful. Fewer than 50% of the women reported contractions as frequently as every 10 minutes or more.

Topics

preterm labor early warning signs, symptoms before premature labor, uterine contractions preterm birth, vaginal discharge preterm labor, pelvic pressure premature delivery, backache preterm labor symptom, recognizing early preterm labor, menstrual cramps preterm labor, frequency urination preterm birth, subtle signs premature labor

Cite this article

Katz, M., Goodyear, K., & Creasy, R. K. (1990). Early signs and symptoms of preterm labor. *American journal of obstetrics and gynecology*, *162*(5), 1150-1153. https://doi.org/10.1016/0002-9378(90)90004-q

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