Multiple Births a Health Risk
Women pregnant with twins, triplets
or quadruplets are at greater risk of serious health complications
than are women carrying just one fetus, according to a Canadian
study published.
Researchers at the Universities
of Ottawa and Toronto, who studied 4.4 million records for obstetric
deliveries in Canada, found that women who carry two or more fetuses
are almost 13 times more likely to experience heart failure and
more than twice as likely to develop clotting in the legs and
lungs -- both leading causes of maternal death.
The findings published in this
month's British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology surprised
the study's lead author, Dr. Mark Walker, a scientist with the
Ottawa Health Research Institute.
"These are young healthy women
in the reproductive age window of 16 to 44 where you wouldn't
expect to see these health problems," Walker stated.
"And the implications of this are
two-fold. With women who have multiple gestations, we need to
counsel them about these risks and be vigilant for them," he said.
"So, if the mother has leg pain, shortness of breath or chest
pain, our urgency to look into other problems should be increased."
One obvious example is to consider
administering blood thinners to women carrying multiple fetuses
who are prescribed bed rest, he said.
Although the study did not distinguish
between natural pregnancies and in vitro fertilization, Walker
said he hopes his study will send a message to fertility clinics
responsible for an explosion in multiple pregnancies in recent
years.
"Here's one more cogent reason
to develop techniques to ensure that only one baby results from
the procedure. I may lose my business as an obstetrician, but
it's absolutely safer to have one baby, then wait nine months
to have another," he said.
Dr. Jeff Haebe, a reproductive
endocrinologist at the University of Ottawa, said 60 per cent
of the in vitro fertilizations at his infertility clinic result
in only one baby, and he transfers a maximum of two embryos for
women aged 37 and younger and no more than three for women 38
and older. "And rarely we might go to four," he said.
While there are no laws in North
America limiting the number of embryo implants at one time, Haebe
said Canada should follow the lead of some European countries
that legislate a maximum of two embryos, regardless of age.
"And I think that's a very good
way of handling the problem of multiple births," Haebe said.
Reference
Source 89
December 2, 2004
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