Mode of Birth and Stroke Risk After Childbirth Among Women With Moyamoya Disease
Jong Hun Kim, Kwan Heup Song, Man Young Park, Sang Hun Lee, Jae-woo Lee, Ho Yeon Kim, Jin-Man Jung

TL;DR
A study of over 1,600 women with moyamoya disease found no significant difference in stroke risk after childbirth based on whether they had a cesarean or vaginal birth.
Contribution
The study provides large-scale evidence that mode of birth may not need to be routinely dictated for women with moyamoya disease.
Findings
No significant difference in stroke risk was found between cesarean and vaginal births in women with moyamoya disease.
The effect of birth mode on stroke risk was modified by the patient’s clinical onset type (e.g., hemorrhagic, ischemic).
Stroke incidence was highest in the early postpartum period (≤6 months) and decreased over time.
Abstract
Is the mode of birth (cesarean vs vaginal) associated with differences in the risk of postpartum stroke among women with moyamoya disease? In this cohort study of 1683 women with moyamoya disease, the overall risk of postpartum stroke did not significantly differ by mode of birth. However, the effect of the mode of birth was significantly modified by the patient’s clinical onset type (eg, hemorrhagic, ischemic, or asymptomatic or nonvascular). These findings suggest that a routine preference for cesarean birth among women with moyamoya disease may be unnecessary. There is limited large-scale evidence to guide the optimal mode of birth for patients with moyamoya disease (MMD). To evaluate whether the mode of birth (cesarean vs vaginal) is associated with stroke risk after childbirth for women with MMD. This cohort study evaluated stroke outcomes up to 3 years after childbirth. A…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMoyamoya disease diagnosis and treatment · Cardiovascular Issues in Pregnancy · Neurological Complications and Syndromes
