The association of subclinical infection with preterm labor: the role of C-reactive protein

American journal of obstetrics and gynecology, 153(6), 642-645

DOI 10.1016/s0002-9378(85)80249-0 PMID 4061533 Source

Abstract

The role of subclinical intrauterine infection in preterm labor was evaluated prospectively in 40 patients and appropriate control subjects. The 24 preterm labor patients (60%) with a negative C-reactive protein value responded to tocolysis 95.8% of the time, with a mean delay of delivery of 35.5 days and a mean gestational age of 36.9 weeks. The 16 patients (40%) with a positive C-reactive protein value responded to tocolysis only 37.5% of the time, with a mean delay of delivery of 14.4 days and a mean gestational age of 33.2 weeks. Pathologic evidence of chorioamnionitis was present in 32.9% of 310 preterm deliveries as compared to only 22.3% of 1631 term deliveries. The presence of subclinical infection must be considered in cases of preterm labor, especially among patients for whom tocolytic therapy is unsuccessful.

Topics

subclinical infection preterm labor, c-reactive protein preterm delivery, chorioamnionitis preterm birth, intrauterine infection tocolysis failure, crp elevation pregnancy, preterm labor infection marker, tocolysis response prediction, inflammation preterm delivery

Cite this article

Potkul, R. K., Moawad, A. H., & Ponto, K. L. (1985). The association of subclinical infection with preterm labor: the role of C-reactive protein. *American journal of obstetrics and gynecology*, *153*(6), 642-645. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0002-9378(85)80249-0

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