Uterine artery doppler and pregnancy-associated plasma protein-A in pregnancies with fibroids
Lida Anwari

TL;DR
This study explores how uterine artery Doppler and PAPP-A levels relate to pregnancy outcomes in women with fibroids, finding no strong link to fibroid size but suggesting a possible role in predicting outcomes.
Contribution
The study identifies the potential functional roles of UAD and PAPP-A in determining pregnancy outcomes in fibroid cases, despite no significant association with fibroid size.
Findings
UAD parameters and PAPP-A levels do not significantly correlate with fibroid size.
UAD and PAPP-A may influence pregnancy outcomes in fibroid-affected pregnancies.
Most fibroids in the study were large (>5 cm), but few pregnancy complications were observed.
Abstract
•Uterine fibroids adversely impact maternal and neonatal outcomes.•UAD parameters and PAPP-A levels do not markedly associate with the fibroid size.•UAD and PAPP-A play functional roles in determining the outcomes of pregnancies carrying fibroids. Uterine fibroids adversely impact maternal and neonatal outcomes. UAD parameters and PAPP-A levels do not markedly associate with the fibroid size. UAD and PAPP-A play functional roles in determining the outcomes of pregnancies carrying fibroids. Uterine fibroids affect maternal and neonatal outcomes adversely. Pregnancy-Associated Plasma Protein-A (PAPP-A) and Uterine Artery Doppler (UAD) are used in the first and second trimesters to predict maternal and neonatal outcomes, including maternal preeclampsia, Small-for-Gestational-Age (SGA), and Low Birth Weight (LBW) babies. A retrospective review of medical records over 8-months was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUterine Myomas and Treatments · Muscle and Compartmental Disorders · Parathyroid Disorders and Treatments
