Stress Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effect of Maternal Cortisol Levels on Fetal Heart Rate Patterns
Objective: This study was designed to determine whether maternal cortisol levels affect fetal heart rate (FHR) patterns at third trimester. Design: Cross-sectional descriptive study. Setting: Prenatal wards of 1 public maternity services in Istanbul, Turkey. Participants: This study included 400 nulliparous pregnant women with uncomplicated pregnancies with a single fetus, between October 2022 and December 2022. Measurements and Findings: The minimum sample size required in the study was decided by power analysis. Effect size in the calculation: 0.35, type 1 error rate (α)=0.05, power of the study (1- β) 0.95 (Type II error=0.05) taken as. Accordingly, the minimum number of samples to be reached was calculated as 356 in total, and it was aimed to reach 392 samples, taking into account the 10% risk of loss. Research data will collect with the Data Collection Form. Noise level will measure with the Personal Noise Dosimeter. The FHR data will collect using a cardiotocograph. Saliva cortisol will measure by a microplate reader with commercially available kit based on ELISA.
Pregnancy is associated with psychological stress for many reasons such as physiological, social and emotional changes. In the literature, it is thought that the stress experienced in the prenatal period may affect maternal and fetal health primarily and secondarily. Primary factors; It is the direct effect of increasing stress during pregnancy on biological systems (increasing stress hormones on the body). Secondary factors are; It is an indirect effect on maternal and fetal health as a result of unhealthy behaviors such as substance use and not going to prenatal check-ups in pregnant women who experience stress symptoms. In both ways, stress is associated with adverse maternal, fetal, neonatal and long-term outcomes. Prenatal stress; It is reported to increase the risk of hypertensive diseases, placental abnormalities, increased uterine, arterial resistance, spontaneous abortion, antenatal bleeding, preterm labor, difficult labor, operative deliveries, postpartum depression, intrauterine growth retardation, low APGAR Score, low birth weight and fetal death. Along with these, maternal anxiety seemed to affect the duration and variability of the FHR, with prolonged accelerations often fused into sustained tachycardia. A further paper reported that the children of women who were highly anxious during pregnancy were more likely to be hyperactive, more likely to show attention deficit, and more likely to exhibit difficult behavior and aggression compared with children from low anxiety mothers. Fetal heart rate (FHR) monitoring is the primary clinical technique for assessing fetal well-being and is one of the most useful techniques for investigating fetal neurodevelopment. In addition, FHR acceleration (defined as > 15 beats/min from baseline) is associated with fetal movement (fetal reactivity) and has been found to have a high association with fetal well-being. Before 24 weeks gestation, fetal reactivity is rare, and it would seem that the appearance of FHR reactivity is related to maturation of the central nervous system (CNS), which occurs at the beginning of the third trimester. In research which conducted in 2010, found that fetuses of women who had a cortisol increase following an arithmetic task versus those who did not, had higher resting (HR) and less short-term HR variability (HRV) 20 min after the stressor task ended. There was a trend finding for participants who had a cortisol increase to report higher levels of life stress. In other research, higher resting maternal cortisol during the 3rd trimester was associated with greater amplitude and amount (time spent) of fetal movement during a 50-min observation period. The aim of the present study was to determine determine whether maternal cortisol levels affect fetal heart rate (FHR) patterns. ;
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