Abstract

Between 1990 and 1993, 166 cases underwent cordocentesis and were followed for at least the following 4 weeks in the Prenatal Diagnosis and Therapy Centre of Vienna University. The indications for the procedure were structural malformations in 46.4 per cent of the cases, other high-risk diagnosis in 48.8 per cent, and maternal age over 35 years in only 4.8 per cent. We investigated retrospectively all cases of complications resulting in fetal loss or preterm labour. Abortion, intrauterine fetal death, chorioamnionitis, and preterm delivery occurred in 0.6, 5.4, 0.6 and 9.0 per cent of these cases, respectively, adding up to a total of 26 cases (15.7 per cent). Although this rate looks relatively high, 20 of the 26 cases had already displayed signs implying a complicated prognosis. Neither maternal age, gestational age, number of attempts, nor placental location correlated with fetal loss or preterm delivery. Significantly higher rates of fetal loss or preterm delivery were observed when cordocentesis was performed in cases diagnosed as duodenal/intestinal stenosis or hydrops-ascites-hydrothorax/hygroma colli (P = 0.0488 and P = 0.0005). The frequency of complications did not decrease as the experience of the operators increased.

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