Ambient Temperature and Risk of Preeclampsia: Biased Association?
Nathalie AugerJack SiemiatyckiMarianne Bilodeau-BertrandJessica Healy-ProfitósTom KosatskyPublished in: Paediatric and perinatal epidemiology (2017)
This study demonstrates that associations between ambient temperature and preeclampsia may be biased by short gestation, because preeclampsia commonly occurs earlier in pregnancy. Temperatures during gestation change with time for all women, and temperatures early in pregnancy frequently differ from temperatures later in pregnancy. Variation in temperature over gestation may lead to a coincidental association with preeclampsia.