Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3005848 | Pregnancy Hypertension: An International Journal of Women's Cardiovascular Health | 2011 | 6 Pages |
ObjectivesTo analyze the frequency of the different clinical presentations of the disease in women with HELLP syndrome and the most important factors that can predict a different maternal and fetal outcome.Study designThis is a cross-sectional, consecutive, case-series study, the subjects being all patients with HELLP syndrome admitted to our Hospital within the last decade (1999–2009).ResultsThe rate of maternal complications was 43.0% and perinatal mortality 14.1%. The severity of the syndrome, measured by The Mississippi Classification, influenced the rate of maternal complications but not fetal mortality: the rate of maternal complications among women in class 1 HELLP syndrome was 67.6%, compared to 49.3% in class 2 and 24.0% in class 3 HELLP syndrome, p < 0.0001. In a 21.8% of women, the onset of the disease was after delivery. We highlight the fact that those cases with an early puerperium onset of the disease were those with a higher number of maternal complications (odds ratio: 2.38; CI: 1.05–5.44).ConclusionsThese results suggest the possibility of an increased complication rate when the onset of the syndrome appears after delivery and the necessity of having a high grade of suspicion in every case to diagnose the disease, even when the gestation and delivery were normal.