Abstract

Introduction: Perinatal asphyxia is one of the main causes of morbidity and mortality in newborns. It generates high costs, both social and economic, and presents modifiable risk factors.Objective: To determine the biological and psychosocial factors and risk behaviors associated with the development of perinatal asphyxia (Sarnat II-III) in newborns from low socioeconomic status in a tier III university hospital in the city of Cali, Colombia.Materials and Methods: With a case and control design, 216 patients were studied (54 cases/162 controls) (1 case/3 matched controls). The cases were defined as newborns with modified or severe perinatal asphyxia (Sarnat II-III) between 2012 and 2014, with gestational age ≥ 36 weeks, with neurological signs not attributable to other causes, multiorgan compromise, advanced reanimation, and presence of a sentinel event. For the analysis, conditional logistic regression models were developed to evaluate association (OR), considering that the cases and controls had been paired by the birth and gestational age variables.Results: The final model showed that, from the group of biological variables, meconium amniotic fluid was identified as a risk factor (OR 15.28, 95%CI 2.78–83.94). Induction of labor lowered the risk of perinatal asphyxia by 97% (OR 0.03, 95%CI 0.01–0.21), and monitoring of fetal heart rate was associated with lower odds by 99% (OR 0.01, 95%CI 0.00–0.31) of developing perinatal asphyxia in the newborn. Regarding social variables, the lack of social support was identified as a risk factor for the development of perinatal asphyxia (OR 6.44, 95%CI 1.16–35.66); in contrast, secondary education lowered the odds of developing perinatal asphyxia by 85% when compared with pregnant women who only had primary school education (OR 0.15, 95%CI 0.03–0.77).Conclusion: Assessment of biological and psychosocial factors and social support is important in pregnant women to determine the risk of developing perinatal asphyxia in a low-income population.

Highlights

  • Perinatal asphyxia is one of the main causes of morbidity and mortality in newborns

  • The final model showed that, from the group of biological variables, meconium amniotic fluid was identified as a risk factor

  • Induction of labor lowered the risk of perinatal asphyxia by 97%, and monitoring of fetal heart rate was associated with lower odds by 99% of developing perinatal asphyxia in the newborn

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Summary

Introduction

Perinatal asphyxia is one of the main causes of morbidity and mortality in newborns. It generates high costs, both social and economic, and presents modifiable risk factors. Perinatal asphyxia can be defined as a syndrome with a wide variety of clinical features in which newborns show specific neurological abnormalities during the first 24 h after birth. This is followed by acute events, characterized by cardiorespiratory depression leading to variable degrees of hypoxemia and hypercapnia and generating metabolic acidosis [5, 6]. It is estimated that ∼15–20% of newborns that develop perinatal asphyxia have brain damage and die within the first 28 days of life Of those who survive, 25% may have permanent neuropsychological sequelae [7, 8]. All of this generates deleterious psychosocial effects in society and in the families of affected patients, in addition to high costs for the health system [9, 10]

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