[Complications following cesarean section]. 1990

S A Rasmussen, and J M Maltau
Kvinneklinikken Regionsykehuset i Tromsø.

During a seven-years period, 898 women (9.9% of all deliveries) had a cesarean section at the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University Hospital of Tromsø. 29.3% of the women suffered one or more complications (8.5% intraoperative, 23.1% postoperative). The most common complication was infection (22.3%). The following factors were associated with the occurrence of complications: emergency operation, obesity, labor prior to surgery, increased duration of labor or rupture of fetal membranes prior to operation, low gestational age, and station of the presenting part of the fetus below the ischial spinal plane. The same tendency was found for intra- and postoperative complications. Hb levels less than 12.0 g/100 ml increased the risk of infection. We suggest ways of reducing both the number of cesarean sections and the number of complications.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D011183 Postoperative Complications Pathologic processes that affect patients after a surgical procedure. They may or may not be related to the disease for which the surgery was done, and they may or may not be direct results of the surgery. Complication, Postoperative,Complications, Postoperative,Postoperative Complication
D011247 Pregnancy The status during which female mammals carry their developing young (EMBRYOS or FETUSES) in utero before birth, beginning from FERTILIZATION to BIRTH. Gestation,Pregnancies
D002585 Cesarean Section Extraction of the FETUS by means of abdominal HYSTEROTOMY. Abdominal Delivery,Delivery, Abdominal,C-Section (OB),Caesarean Section,Postcesarean Section,Abdominal Deliveries,C Section (OB),C-Sections (OB),Caesarean Sections,Cesarean Sections,Deliveries, Abdominal
D004630 Emergencies Situations or conditions requiring immediate intervention to avoid serious adverse results. Emergency
D005260 Female Females
D006801 Humans Members of the species Homo sapiens. Homo sapiens,Man (Taxonomy),Human,Man, Modern,Modern Man
D012307 Risk Factors An aspect of personal behavior or lifestyle, environmental exposure, inborn or inherited characteristic, which, based on epidemiological evidence, is known to be associated with a health-related condition considered important to prevent. Health Correlates,Risk Factor Scores,Risk Scores,Social Risk Factors,Population at Risk,Populations at Risk,Correlates, Health,Factor, Risk,Factor, Social Risk,Factors, Social Risk,Risk Factor,Risk Factor Score,Risk Factor, Social,Risk Factors, Social,Risk Score,Score, Risk,Score, Risk Factor,Social Risk Factor

Related Publications

S A Rasmussen, and J M Maltau
November 1970, Ceskoslovenska gynekologie,
S A Rasmussen, and J M Maltau
October 1975, Orvosi hetilap,
S A Rasmussen, and J M Maltau
November 1970, Ceskoslovenska gynekologie,
S A Rasmussen, and J M Maltau
January 1986, Akusherstvo i ginekologiia,
S A Rasmussen, and J M Maltau
January 1951, Revista argentina de urologia,
S A Rasmussen, and J M Maltau
August 1986, Akusherstvo i ginekologiia,
S A Rasmussen, and J M Maltau
May 1967, Ginekologia polska,
S A Rasmussen, and J M Maltau
November 1970, Ceskoslovenska gynekologie,
S A Rasmussen, and J M Maltau
February 1996, American journal of clinical pathology,
S A Rasmussen, and J M Maltau
January 1977, Transactions of the Pacific Coast Obstetrical and Gynecological Society,
Copied contents to your clipboard!