Monday, December 15, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Twins Should Be Delivered Two Weeks Early To Minimise Deaths: Scientists

IANS, 07 Sep, 2016 11:55 AM
    Twins should be delivered at 37 weeks of pregnancy – about two to three weeks earlier than usual full term – to minimise stillbirths and newborn deaths, according to scientists, including one of Indian origin.
     
    It is well known that the risk of stillbirth is higher in twin pregnancies, researchers said.
     
    Uncomplicated twin pregnancies are often delivered early in an attempt to prevent stillbirth, but the optimal gestational age for delivery that minimises risks to newborns is not known.
     
    Current recommendations vary on the timing of delivery, starting from 34 up to 37 weeks’ gestation in monochorionic twin pregnancies (twins that share the same placenta) and from 37 up to 39 weeks in dichorionic twin pregnancies (twins that have two individual placentas).
     
    Researchers including Sohinee Bhattacharya from the University of Aberdeen in the UK analysed the results of 32 studies, published within the past 10 years, of women with uncomplicated twin pregnancies that reported rates of stillbirth and neonatal mortality (defined as death up to 28 days after delivery) at various gestational ages after 34 weeks.
     
    Overall the studies included 35,171 twin pregnancies (29,685 dichorionic and 5,486 monochorionic). Study design and quality were taken into account to minimise bias.
     
    The researchers looked specifically at the balance between the risk of stillbirths from expectant management (‘watchful waiting’) and the risk of neonatal death from delivery beyond 34 weeks.
     
     
    They found that, in dichorionic pregnancies, the risk of stillbirths and neonatal death were balanced until 37 weeks’ gestation.
     
    However, delay in delivery by a week led to an additional 8.8 deaths per 1,000 due to an increase in stillbirth.
     
    In monochorionic pregnancies, the risk of stillbirth appears to be higher than neonatal death beyond 36 weeks’ gestation.
     
    Rates of neonatal morbidity (including respiratory distress syndrome, septicaemia, or neonatal seizures) and admission to the neonatal intensive care unit showed a consistent reduction with increasing gestational age in both monochorionic and dichorionic pregnancies.
     
    Based on these estimates, the researchers suggest that for women with dichorionic twin pregnancies, delivery should be considered at 37 weeks’ gestation “to prevent the significant increase in stillbirths associated with expectant management compared with the risk of neonatal deaths associated with early delivery.”
     
    In monochorionic twin pregnancies, “there is no clear evidence to support routine delivery before 36 weeks’ gestation,” they said.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Saskatchewan Sets New ER Wait Target; Acknowledges It Will Miss 2017 Goal

    Saskatchewan Sets New ER Wait Target; Acknowledges It Will Miss 2017 Goal
    REGINA — The Saskatchewan government is resuscitating a promise to eliminate emergency room waits.

    Saskatchewan Sets New ER Wait Target; Acknowledges It Will Miss 2017 Goal

    New Diabetes Cases In US Adults Are Falling, But It's Not Clear Why, Government Officials Say

    New Diabetes Cases In US Adults Are Falling, But It's Not Clear Why, Government Officials Say
    NEW YORK — Health officials say fewer cases of diabetes are being diagnosed in U.S. adults.

    New Diabetes Cases In US Adults Are Falling, But It's Not Clear Why, Government Officials Say

    Rising Cigarette Taxes Are Tied To Declines In US Infant Deaths, 11 Years Of Data Suggest

    Rising Cigarette Taxes Are Tied To Declines In US Infant Deaths, 11 Years Of Data Suggest
    CHICAGO — When it costs more to smoke, fewer babies die, according to a new study that links rising cigarette taxes with declines in infant mortality, especially among blacks.

    Rising Cigarette Taxes Are Tied To Declines In US Infant Deaths, 11 Years Of Data Suggest

    Sugar-Free Drinks Equally Bad For Teeth

    Sugar-Free Drinks Equally Bad For Teeth
    If you have switched to sugar-free drinks to avoid tooth decay, don't be rest assured that you have got rid of the problem. Even sugar-free drinks and foods may kick-off tooth decay, dentists have warned.

    Sugar-Free Drinks Equally Bad For Teeth

    Healthy Snacks Secretly Making Us Fat

    Healthy Snacks Secretly Making Us Fat
    When preparing snacks, choose low-energy releasing foods and avoid sipping on smoothies or fruit juices, nutritionist Sarah Schenker was quoted as saying in the Daily Mail.

    Healthy Snacks Secretly Making Us Fat

    High-Fat Diet Also Bad For Brain

    High-Fat Diet Also Bad For Brain
    A high-fat diet also appears to prompt normally bustling immune cells in our brain to become sedentary and start consuming the connections between our neurons, a new study has found.

    High-Fat Diet Also Bad For Brain