Sökning: "Very preterm birth"
Visar resultat 16 - 20 av 60 avhandlingar innehållade orden Very preterm birth.
16. Smoking and pregnancy : with special reference to preterm birth and the feto-placental unit
Sammanfattning : Objective: To study maternal smoking in pregnancy in relation to preterm birth, placental abruption and perinatal mortality in pregnancies with placental abruption, and to pulse wave characteristics in fetal aorta. Methods: Two cohort studies with data on single births obtained from the Swedish Medical Birth Registry (N=311 977 and N=795 459, respectively). LÄS MER
17. Long-term consequences of preterm birth : Swedish national cohort studies
Sammanfattning : The World Health Organization defines preterm birth as birth before 37 complete weeks. The proportion of very preterm children with severe neurological disabilities has become smaller, but bulks of data indicate that, for many of the children born preterm, persistent subtle difficulties are evident in school age. LÄS MER
18. From Eye to Mind : Early Visuomotor Performance and Developmental Trajectories in Children Born Preterm
Sammanfattning : Children born very preterm, at less than 32 weeks of gestation, have an increased risk of developing problems with attention, cognition, perception and motor function. Despite this, the developmental trajectories leading from preterm birth to later impairments are not fully understood. LÄS MER
19. Polycystic Ovary Syndrome and Pregnancy : Prenatal Exposures and Pregnancy Complications
Sammanfattning : Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is the most common endocrine disorder in women of fertile age. The aetiology of PCOS is not fully understood and might be affected by foetal exposures. Women with PCOS have an increased risk of pregnancy complications, but information on rare severe complications is scarce. LÄS MER
20. Growth pattern and nutritional intake as predictors for retinopathy of prematurity
Sammanfattning : Background: Retinopathy of prematurity (ROP) is a sight-threatening disease that affects extremely preterm and very preterm infants. Approximately 5–10% of infants screened for ROP go on to develop severe ROP that requires treatment. LÄS MER