Silent chorioamnionitis as a cause of preterm labor refractory to tocolytic therapy

American journal of obstetrics and gynecology, 149(7), 726-730

DOI 10.1016/0002-9378(84)90111-x PMID 6465222 Source

Abstract

Thirty-seven consecutive patients with singleton pregnancies in "uncomplicated" preterm labor with intact membranes suitable for tocolysis were evaluated for evidence of silent chorioamnionitis by means of maternal serum C-reactive protein and amniotic fluid white blood cell count, Gram stain, and cultures. Abnormalities in these markers of infection were found to be significantly more common in cases that were refractory to tocolysis. These cases also showed both pathologic evidence of chorioamnionitis and a significantly greater neonatal early infectious morbidity. We conclude that silent chorioamnionitis is a significant cause of "uncomplicated" preterm labor refractory to conventional methods of tocolysis.

Topics

chorioamnionitis preterm labor, silent infection tocolysis failure, amniotic fluid infection markers, c-reactive protein preterm labor, refractory preterm labor causes, subclinical chorioamnionitis, infection induced preterm labor, tocolysis resistance infection

Cite this article

Hameed, C., Tejani, N., Verma, U. L., & Archbald, F. (1984). Silent chorioamnionitis as a cause of preterm labor refractory to tocolytic therapy. *American journal of obstetrics and gynecology*, *149*(7), 726-730. https://doi.org/10.1016/0002-9378(84)90111-x

Related articles