Annals of Medicine (Jan 2021)

Dexamethasone on absent end-diastolic flow in umbilical artery, in growth restricted fetuses from early-onset preeclamptic pregnancies and the perinatal outcome

  • Oana Sorina Tica,
  • Andrei Adrian Tica,
  • Doriana Cojocaru,
  • Mihaela Gheonea,
  • Irina Tica,
  • Dragos Ovidiu Alexandru,
  • Victor Cojocaru,
  • Lucian Cristian Petcu,
  • Vlad Iustin Tica

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/07853890.2021.1968030
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 53, no. 1
pp. 1455 – 1463

Abstract

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AbstractBackground Absent end-diastolic flow (AEDF) in the umbilical artery (UA) worsens the already poor prognosis of growth-restricted fetuses (GRFs) in pregnancies complicated by early-onset preeclampsia with severe features (ESP).Method We assessed the correlation between the effect of maternal dexamethasone (Dex) on AEDF in the UA and perinatal outcomes, in 59 GRFs from EPS-complicated pregnancies. The maternal outcome was also evaluated.Results The mean maternal age at inclusion was 22.4 ± 5.9 years. Dex transiently restored EDF in the UA in 38 (64.4%) cases (trAEDF group), but in 21 (35.6%) patients, the flow was persistently absent (prAEDF group). The effect lasted up to the 4th day.The gestational age at diagnosis, number of days from admission until delivery, and fetal weight were significantly lower in the prAEDF group than in the trAEDF group (p .05).Conclusions The Dex no-effect on UA Doppler in GRFs with AEDF in the UA, in EPS-complicated pregnancies, can be a useful marker for a higher risk of proximal fetal deterioration, poor state at delivery, neonatal hypoxic complications, and worsening maternal condition, but not for perinatal mortality. The findings also highlight the alarmingly younger age of patients with EPS. Finally, all these pregnancies should be monitored in a complex multidisciplinary manner in tertiary referral units.Key messageThe effect of dexamethasone on absent end-diastolic flow in the umbilical artery in growth-restricted fetuses from pregnancies complicated by early-onset preeclampsia with severe features can be a useful prognostic factor for perinatal outcomes.

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