Perinatal risk factors and Apgar score ≤ 3 in first minute of life in a referral tertiary obstetric and neonatal hospital.
Maria Cândida Ferrarez BouzadaZilma Silveira Nogueira ReisNatália Fernanda Ferreira BrumMarcia Gomes Penido MachadoMaria Albertina Santiago RegoLeni Márcia AnchietaRoberta Maia de Castro RomanelliPublished in: Journal of obstetrics and gynaecology : the journal of the Institute of Obstetrics and Gynaecology (2020)
This study aimed to identify the maternal, labour and newborn risk factors associated with an Apgar score of ≤3 in the first minute of life. This was a cross-sectional evaluation from an internal database information system in a tertiary referral obstetric and neonatal centre. Newborns with gestational age ≥24 weeks and birth weight ≥500 g with a registered Apgar score in the first minute of life were included. A total of 4475 newborns had an Apgar score >3 and 154 newborns had an Apgar score ≤3 in the first minute of life. A multivariate analysis revealed that eclampsia (OR = 31.53), twin pregnancy (OR = 7.06), analgesia (OR = 1.97), prematurity (OR = 2.00) and caesarean section (OR = 2.06) were risk factors for an Apgar score ≤3 in the first minute of life. Identification of these risk factors indicates prompt assistance during prenatal and labour care to prevent neonatal hypoxia and low Apgar scores, identifying newborns that may need resuscitation procedures.Impact StatementWhat is already known on this subject? Adequate prenatal care and proper labour management are the main factors that reduce the risk of complications at birth. The Apgar score at the first minute of life reflects conditions during labour but it is not a parameter that indicates resuscitation procedures. Previous studies have reported the association Apgar score at five minutes of life with the neonatal outcome.What the results of this study add? This study identifies risk factors associated with an Apgar score ≤3 in the first minute of life in a tertiary referral hospital. Eclampsia was the greatest independent risk factor, increasing by 31 times the risk of having an Apgar score ≤3 in the first minute of life.What the implications are of these findings for clinical practice and/or further research? Identification of these risk factors, especially prompt treatment antenataly and during labour for hypertensive pregnant women, can prevent neonatal hypoxia and reduce the number of newborns that may need resuscitation procedures.
Keyphrases
- pregnant women
- gestational age
- birth weight
- risk factors
- preterm birth
- healthcare
- cardiac arrest
- primary care
- pregnancy outcomes
- emergency department
- low birth weight
- palliative care
- body mass index
- endothelial cells
- cardiopulmonary resuscitation
- gene expression
- pain management
- quality improvement
- weight gain
- genome wide