Preterm Labour - Managing Risk in Clinical Practice

Norman - Preterm labour
£19.00 (discounted from £38.00)
£19.00
Authors/editors: Jane Norman and Ian Greer
ISBN: 978-0-521-82186-5
Page count: 380
Publisher: Cambridge UP
Publication year: 2005

This is a practical guide to the optimal clinical management of preterm labour, using the best available evidence. Preterm labour remains a challenge today, even with the latest developments summarised here. The editors and authors (mostly practising clinicians) are all actively involved in research into the mechanisms, aetiology, treatment and associated outcomes of preterm labour. The chapters are based on common clinical scenarios and each provides a comprehensive literature review followed by evidence-based recommendations on appropriate management. A summary of the pathophysiology of parturition is provided, and the obstetric scenarios cover management of threatened preterm labour, management of preterm premature ruptured membranes and management of preterm labour with specific complications (such as intrauterine growth restriction). Other chapters include the epidemiology, the prediction and the prevention of preterm labour. Anaesthetic and paediatric issues are explored in depth, and there are chapters on legal and organisational issues around preterm labour.

Table of contents:
  1. The epidemiology of preterm labour and delivery
  2. Biology of preterm labour
  3. Transcriptional regulation of labour-associated genes
  4. Fetal outcome following preterm delivery
  5. The prediction of preterm labour
  6. Prevention of preterm labour
  7. t;

  8. Management of preterm premature ruptured membranes
  9. Management of threatened preterm labour
  10. Management of preterm labour with specific complications
  11. Anaesthetic issues in preterm labour, and intensive care management of the sick parturient
  12. Management of the preterm neonate
  13. Organisation of high risk obstetric and neonatal services
  14. The management of pregnancy and labour
  15. Treating the preterm infant – the legal context

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