International Journal of Medical and Pharmaceutical Research
2023, Volume-4, Issue-3 doi: 10.5281/zenodo.8007257
Original Article
Outcome of Neonates in Mothers Having Premature Rupture of Membrane (Prom) At Tertiary Care Hospital
 ,
 ,
Published
June 5, 2023
Abstract
Background: Premature rupture of membranes (PROM) is the rupture of the fetal membranes before the onset of labor. Premature rupture of membranes (PROM) is one of the most common problems in Obstetrics complicating approximately 5-10% of term pregnancies. Complications related to PROM are reparatory distress, necrotizing enterocolitis, intraventricular hemorrhage and sepsis. The knowledge of incidence of early onset sepsis in relation to PROM and its effect on neonatal outcome is essential in order to prevent the neonatal morbidity and mortality. Methods: The present study was a single-center, observational Study conducted on patients admitted with neonates, mother with rupture of membrane. Irrespective of treatment and in the department of Paediatrics, Sri Siddhartha Medical College hospital and Research Centre, Tumkur from January 2020 to July 2022. Prior initiation of the study obtained Ethical and Research Committee clearance from Sri Siddhartha Medical College hospital and Research Centre, Tumkur. During present study total 165 neonates were reviewed in OPD/IP, among 85 patients were enrolled into the study according present study inclusion criteria and 80 patients were excluded according exclusion criteria. Results: Most neonates had maternal age of 21-25 years (51.76%).Most neonates in the study were born in primigravida (61.18 %).Most neonates were born with booked appointments (80 %). Most subjects were born through normal vaginal delivery (57.65 %). Most of the study subjects had gestational age of 35-36 weeks (41.17%). Most subjects had latency period of 0-24 hours (56.47 %). Most of the subjects were males (54.11 %). Most of the subjects' weight at birth was 2-2.5 kg (51.76 %). Most of the subjects required admission into NICU (56.47 %). Common neonatal complication in PPROM encountered in our study jaundice; respiratory distress syndrome; hypoglycemia; hypothermia; septicemia and IVH. Most of the subjects had no complications (65.88 %). Common complications occurred during hospital stay in the present study were decreased activity, fever, feeding difficulties, apenic spells, abdominal distension, convulsions and bleeding. Most of the subjects had normal CBC reports (64.71 %). Most of the subjects had normal CRP reports (72.94 %).
Recommended Articles
Loading Image...
Volume-4, Issue-3
Citations
2861 Views
282 Downloads
Share this article
License
Copyright (c) International Journal of Medical and Pharmaceutical Research
pdf Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
All papers should be submitted electronically. All submitted manuscripts must be original work that is not under submission at another journal or under consideration for publication in another form, such as a monograph or chapter of a book. Authors of submitted papers are obligated not to submit their paper for publication elsewhere until an editorial decision is rendered on their submission. Further, authors of accepted papers are prohibited from publishing the results in other publications that appear before the paper is published in the Journal unless they receive approval for doing so from the Editor-In-Chief.
IJMPR open access articles are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. This license lets the audience to give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made and if they remix, transform, or build upon the material, they must distribute contributions under the same license as the original.
Logo
International Journal of Medical and Pharmaceutical Research
About Us
The International Journal of Medical and Pharmaceutical Research (IJMPR) is an EMBASE (Elsevier)–indexed, open-access journal for high-quality medical, pharmaceutical, and clinical research.
Follow Us
© Copyright IJMPR | All Rights Reserved