Abstract

BackgroundUmbilical artery thrombosis is a rare complication of pregnancy strongly associated with poor fetal and perinatal outcomes, such as intrauterine asphyxia, fetal growth restriction, and stillbirth. Its pathogenesis remains unclear, and there is the added challenge of selecting an appropriate delivery time to achieve excellent neonatal outcomes.MethodsOur Hospital is a critical maternal rescue center with approximately 7000 births annually. We present a series of 8 cases of umbilical artery thrombosis diagnosed at the hospital between Apr 1, 2018, and Jan 31, 2020. We identified the cases through a keyword search of the maternity and pathology information management systems.ResultsThree patients were diagnosed with a transabdominal ultrasound scan and hypoxia on fetal heart monitoring. All three patients had emergency cesarean section delivery. Four patients were observed closely for 5 to 13 weeks from initial detection by an ultrasound scan to delivery. Only one patient was diagnosed after vaginal delivery by Hematoxylin-eosin staining of umbilical cord sections. Seven patients had deliveries by cesarean section, and one patient had a vaginal delivery. All infants were born alive.ConclusionsUmbilical artery thrombosis is a challenging and rare condition that can occur at different gestational ages, especially when diagnosed in the third trimester and accompanied by fetal growth restriction. Consequently, these patients require close monitoring of umbilical blood flow and fetal growth and intervention at the appropriate time to achieve an optimal outcome.

Highlights

  • Data extraction We identified the 8 cases reported in this paper through a search of the electronic maternity discharge summary records using the search term “umbilical artery thrombosis.”

  • This study identified 8 cases of umbilical artery thrombosis out of approximately 8400 deliveries, which corresponds to an incidence of 0.8%

  • This paper discusses for the first time the management of the fetus with a differential diagnosis of umbilical artery thrombosis, choice of delivery mode, and prognosis of the fetus

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Summary

Introduction

Umbilical artery thrombosis is an infrequent pregnancy complication, with an estimated incidence of 0.0025 to 0.045% of all gestations [1]. It is clinically detectable by Doppler ultrasonographic flow studies and confirmable by postpartum pathological examination of the umbilical cord. Doppler ultrasound waveforms occur with umbilical artery thrombosis before obvious fetal impairment [2] It rarely happens, it carries a poor fetal and perinatal prognosis [3]. Umbilical artery thrombosis is a rare complication of pregnancy strongly associated with poor fetal and perinatal outcomes, such as intrauterine asphyxia, fetal growth restriction, and stillbirth. There is the added challenge of selecting an appropriate delivery time to achieve excellent neonatal outcomes

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