View clinical trials related to Obstetric Labor, Premature.
Filter by:This is a cross - sectional study to determine the prevalence of GBS infection and associated factors in preterm labor women conceived through ART. 221 subjects will be involved.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether a combination of evidence-based strategies can improve intrapartum and newborn care in facilities to reduce mortality among preterm infants. This will be a cluster randomized implementation science study across 23 facilities in Eastern Uganda and Western Kenya. Selected interventions will be supported in facilities to measure impact during the study period. These interventions are: a) data strengthening and data use activities; b) implementation of a modified WHO Safe Childbirth Checklist with an emphasis on preterm labor and preterm babies; c) simulation-based provider training and mentoring on key existing evidence-based practices to improve newborn outcomes; d) support of Quality Improvement (QI) cycles to identify and resolve facility-specific issues and bottlenecks. A two-stage design will be used where all study facilities will receive some aspects of the intervention initially, namely data strengthening and the modified checklist. Subsequently, the remaining interventions (QI cycles and simulation training of providers) will be rolled out to a randomly selected half of the facilities in the first stage. At a second stage, the remaining half of the facilities will receive the remaining interventions.
Prematurity is the most important cause of obstetric morbidity and mortality. Health centers and obstetricians are trying to reduce the preterm birth rate by taking into account the permanent effects of premature birth on human life in the early and long term. The most effective solution of preterm delivery is to determine the patients entering the risk group and to prevent preterm labor by putting the correct diagnosis at the right time. Recently, there have been studies on the efficacy of pessary practice in preventing preterm birth, but with the positive results of these studies, there has been hope for early birth prevention as well as other treatments. The aim of this study is; To assess the effectiveness of pessary use in patients with high risk for preterm labor and prophylactic cervical length less than 25 mm below 25 weeks and with a history of cervical insufficiency.
A prospective randomized control trial that will compare cervical cerclage plus vaginal progesterone to vaginal progesterone along in twin pregnancies complicate by a short cervix (</= 15.0mm) between 16w0d to 25w6d.
Administration of corticosteroids is standard practice for pregnant patients at risk of preterm labour to reduce the risk of neonatal respiratory distress syndrome, intraventricular hemorrhage, necrotizing enterocolitis and neonatal mortality. However, there is an unknown effect of antenatal steroids on both fetal and neonatal immune function. The purpose of this study is to demonstrate the effect of antenatal steroids on the size of the fetal thymus gland.
To study the equivalence of the Monica Novii™ Patch System in patients admitted for threatened pre-term labor and for pre-term labor & delivery from 32 +0 weeks gestation by determining the equivalence of the Novii™ Patch System in monitoring Fetal Heart Rate (FHR), Maternal Heart Rate (MHR) and Uterine Contractions (UC) to Doppler FHR, tocodynamometer (TOCO) UC and photo plethysmograph MHR FDA approved predicates.
Magnesium is a known treatment for neuroprotection in preterm labor before 32 week of gestation. High concentration of Magnesium in the blood stream known as cause of conduction abnormalities and ECG changes such us prolonged QT, QRS and PR in about. The goal of our work is to evaluate the PR intervals in embryos after maternal treatment with magnesium during preterm labor.
A randomized controlled double blinded study included 200 women with preterm contractions. After successful arrest of contractions women were randomized into 2 equal groups: GI women received nifedipine 20 mg tablets twice daily and GII women received Ritodrine 5 mg tablets every 6 hours. The primary outcome was gestational age at delivery and the secondary outcomes include episodes of recurrent preterm labor, mode of delivery, maternal side effects and neonatal outcome
The purpose of this study is to determine efficacy of vaginal and oral progesterone after tocolytic therapy in threatened preterm labor
The purpose of this study is to explore a new method to stop preterm uterine contractions using an electrical device. The device, an "electrical pacemaker for the uterus," has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for clinical research in pregnant women. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the feasibility and safety of the device. The investigators hypothesize that human preterm uterine contractions can be safely and objectively inhibited with a weak electrical current provided by an electrical inhibition (EI)/uterine pacemaker device, and that this effect relates to the timing and length of EI exposure.