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العنوان
Maternal and perinatal outcomes in pregnant women with COVOID-19:
المؤلف
Gedawy, Asmaa Ragab Taha.
هيئة الاعداد
باحث / اسماء رجب طه جداوي
مشرف / سعد عبدالنبي أحمد الجيلاني
مشرف / محمود حسني إبراهيم
مشرف / أيمن محب يوسف
الموضوع
Obstetrics. Gynecology. Genital Diseases, Female.
تاريخ النشر
2023.
عدد الصفحات
115 p. :
اللغة
الإنجليزية
الدرجة
ماجستير
التخصص
أمراض النساء والتوليد
تاريخ الإجازة
13/4/2023
مكان الإجازة
جامعة المنيا - كلية الطب - التوليد وأمراض النساء
الفهرس
Only 14 pages are availabe for public view

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from 117

Abstract

Elegant in its symptoms, CoV19 is one of today’s most infectious viruses (acute respiratory alert and then death).
Several Corona illnesses emerged and spread in 2018 from pandemics that hit every region of the planet. April 2020. The Covivirus 19 scare in China prompted a global tourist campaign.
There have been many research published that study the correlation between COVID-19 illness and healthy birth outcomes, as well as studies that evaluate the symptoms and diagnostics of this infection.
In recent years, researchers in China have conducted small-scale studies to investigate the link between maternal COVID-19 infection and the transfer of the virus to their infants.
Information on pregnancies and their outcomes was collected from Egypt’s isolation hospitals for this cross-sectional retrospective cohort research. Women who were prenatally screened for SARS-CoV-2 and had their babies in a hospital were included in the study. Pregnancies that were completed during a hospitalization related to COVID-19 were evaluated by both medical and gynecological practitioners, and the results of those pregnancies were documented.
The primary findings of the research showed that women had a mean age of 30.436.12 years.
Average body mass index was 23.042.18 Kg/m2
In the third trimester, the SARS-COV2 virus was detected in almost 40 (76.1%) of the women studied.
There were a total of 34 (73.9%) multigravida women and the mean body mass index ( bmi was 3.152.32 births.
There were 34 (or 73.9%) multiparas with a mean parity of 1.781.53.
Among the pregnant women who participated in the study, 33.346.82 weeks was the average gestational age.
In general, patients spend 10.046.04 days in the hospital on average.
One fifth as many women as males died throughout the study period.
One-third of newborn complications were due to premature delivery.
Foetal demise occurred in the uterus (10.9 percent of the time).
8.7 percent of patients had respiratory distress syndrome (RDS).
One infant (2.2% of all cases) was found to have a COVID virus infection, and four infants (8.7% of all cases) required admission to the neonatal intensive care unit due to neonatal jaundice.