KUMJ | VOL. 10 | NO. 4 | ISSUE 40 | OCT-DEC, 2012
Intrauterine Foetal Death and Its Probable Causes: Two Years Experience in Dhulikhel Hospital – Kathmandu University Hospital
Tamrakar SR, Chawla CD
Abstract: Background
World health Organization definition of intrauterine foetal demise encompasses
any abortion or fetal demise prior to expulsion from its mother, and recommends
different protocols according to gestational age. However, conventionally and
also in our institution, foetal demise prior to 28 weeks of gestation is managed as
abortion in a manner different from foetal demise post 28 weeks of gestation.
Objective
To find the incidence and characteristics of pregnancies that resulted in stillbirths.
Methods
A retrospective study, done in Dhulikhel Hospital, Kathmandu University Hospital
in the year 2010 and 2011, among 4219 deliveries and 97 fetal deaths. Cases of
multiple pregnancy and fetal death diagnosed by ultrasound before the 28th week
of gestation were excluded. The included intrauterine foetal demise cases (n=90)
were compared with a control group of randomly selected pregnancies (n = 537)
delivered during the same time period. Assumed predictors of stillbirth were
examined through inferential ways (Chi square, t test) using SPSS Version 13.0 for
Windows.
Results
Incidence of intrauterine foetal demise was 2.13% in the year 2010 and 2011.
Mothers in the stillbirth group were slightly older than mothers of live-born infants
(25.47±5.64 years vs 23.62±4.31 years, p value=0.000). A slightly higher proportion
of women in the stillbirth group were of Tamang ethnic origin and primiparous (p
= 0.011, 0.000) . Foetus expelled after IUFD had lower weight compared to live
births, (2925.14±444.14gram vs 2182.78±821.04gram, p=0.000) for gestational
age. The stillborn babies were generally born at an earlier gestational age, as would
be expected (p=0.000). Incidence of intrauterine foetal demise gradually decreases
as parity advances. The incidence was higher in patients receiving antenatal care
outside Dhulikhel Hospital, Kathmandu University Hospital.
Conclusions
While comparing the subject with the theme of the national conference of Nepal
Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologist, most of the cases were mother not
receiving antenatal care or those receiving antenatal care in the periphery, There
is no denying that there would be a massive improvement in women’s health if the
co-ordination between the peripheral health care center and tertiary care center
was to be improved.
Keyword : Gestational age, intrauterine foetal death (IUD), parity