The epidemiology of placental infarction at term.
The incidence and associations of placental infarction at term were investigated as part of a population based case-control study of small for gestational age (SGA) infants. 509 placentas from women delivering SGA infants (SGAP) and 529 placentas from women delivering infants with birthweights appropriate for gestational age (AGAP) were examined using fixed protocols for macroscopic identification and microscopic confirmation of infarction. Other information was obtained by maternal interview and from an obstetric database.Infarcts were found in 17.3 per cent of SGAP and 11.7 per cent of AGAP. This difference was in placentas with multiple infarcts not involving the placental margin and was significant in multivariate analysis (OR 1.66; 95 per cent CI 1.12,2.47). Multivariate analysis showed significant associations between the presence of any infarct and maternal hypertension in both SGAP (OR=4.00; 95 per cent CI 1.96,8.16) and AGAP (OR 2.99; 95 per cent CI 1.23,7.32); maternal smoking, associated with a lesser risk in SGAP only (OR=0.31; 95 per cent CI 0.13,0.73); maternal age at first pregnancy in a linear relationship with AGAP only (beta co-efficient 0.09, P=0.0034); and between some ethnic groups. We conclude that at least five factors have independent associations with the incidence of placental infarction and these associations differ by site and age of infarcts.[1]References
- The epidemiology of placental infarction at term. Becroft, D.M., Thompson, J.M., Mitchell, E.A. Placenta (2002) [Pubmed]
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