Assessment of Uterine Contraction and Atonic Bleeding during the Third Stage of Labor Using Shear Wave Elastography
Ayumi Okuyama, Junichi Hasegawa, Kohei Seo, Tatsuya Izdebski, Minako Goto, Akihiko Sekizawa, Kiyotake Ichizuka

TL;DR
This study shows that lower uterine stiffness during labor's third stage is linked to higher blood loss, suggesting uterine contractions play a role in stopping bleeding.
Contribution
The study introduces shear wave elastography as a novel method to assess uterine stiffness and its relation to bleeding during labor.
Findings
Lower minimum shear wave velocity was significantly associated with large blood loss during the third stage of labor.
The time from infant delivery to placental delivery was longer in cases with large blood loss.
Uterine stiffness measured by shear wave elastography correlates with biological hemostasis during labor.
Abstract
Objective: This study aimed to clarify the relationship between fluctuations in uterine stiffness during the third stage of labor and blood loss upon placenta delivery using shear wave elastography. Methods: This prospective cohort study enrolled consecutive singleton pregnant women above 37 weeks of gestation who delivered infants transvaginally at a single perinatal center. Shear wave velocities (SWV) were continuously measured during the third stage of transvaginal labor using transabdominal ultrasound and these values were compared between groups with large (≥500 g) and small amounts of bleeding during this stage. Results: In total, 8 cases of large bleeding and 47 cases of small bleeding were compared. The large amount of bleeding group had a significantly lower median of minimum SWV values (0.97 [0.52–1.01] m/s than the small amount of bleeding group (1.25 [1.04–1.48] m/s p =…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBacteriophages and microbial interactions · Protein Structure and Dynamics · Biochemical and Molecular Research
