[Puerperium after threatened premature labor--positive effects of infection screening by determination of CRP in pregnancy]

Zentralblatt Fur Gynakologie, 116(10), 555-560

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Abstract

Silent intrauterine infection as cause of preterm labour should be recognised early by measuring C-reactive protein (CRP) levels in the maternal serum. Ensuing antibiotic therapy may not only cause gestational prolongation, but also has a positive effect on pathology during the puerperal period. Consequently, we examined the rate of infectious puerperal complications of 181 patients who suffered from so-called idiopathic preterm labour. 84 patients showed normal CRP-levels at the onset of tocolysis (< 5 mg/l); an elevated level was found in 97 patients (> 5 mg/l). Patients with elevated CRP-levels and supplemented antibiotic therapy during pregnancy (n = 51) showed significantly fewer symptoms of postpartal endometritis than women with similarly elevated CRP-levels but without antibiotics (n = 46). This effect was not produced when preterm labour was associated with normal CRP-levels. Patients with premature contractions and elevated CRP-values at the onset of tocolysis seem to benefit from the antibiotic therapy during pregnancy because they show reduced infectious complications throughout the puerperal period.

Topics

C-reactive protein screening preterm labor infection, silent intrauterine infection preterm labour CRP antibiotic therapy, antibiotic treatment threatened premature labor puerperal outcomes, CRP elevated tocolysis antibiotic prophylaxis postpartum endometritis, postpartal endometritis prevention preterm labor antibiotic therapy, infection screening CRP pregnancy puerperium complications, preterm labour idiopathic intrauterine infection screening, maternal serum CRP preterm labor outcomes prospective, tocolysis antibiotic supplementation puerperal infection reduction, Winkler CRP preterm labor puerperal complications

Cite this article

Winkler, M., Gellings, R., Pütz, I., Funk, A., & Goetz, M. A. (1994). Puerperium after threatened premature labor--positive effects of infection screening by determination of CRP in pregnancy. *Zentralblatt Fur Gynakologie*, *116*(10), 555-560.

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