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Summer Heat Could Reduce Amniotic Fluid Level In Pregnant Women

by Aruna on Aug 4 2009 3:32 PM

A new study reveals women who are pregnant have a higher incidence of insufficient amniotic fluid levels (oligohydramnios) in summer months due to dehydration.

Amniotic fluid is the nourishing and protecting liquid contained by the amnion of a pregnant woman.

It protects the developing baby by cushioning the mother's abdomen, promotes muscular and skeletal development, and helps to protect the fetus from heat loss.

The study, conducted by researchers at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (BGU), was aimed at determining whether the summer season is a risk factor for oligohydramnios.

The researchers compared the frequency of amniotic fluid loss during the summer months versus its frequency during the rest of the year.

In the study at Soroka University Medical Center in Beer-Sheva, Israel, the researchers evaluated pregnancies of patients with oligohydramnios that delivered from May to August during the years 1988-2007.

They first excluded other causes of fluid loss, such as premature rupture of membranes, intra-uterine growth restriction or malformations, and then determined that higher rates of oligohydramnios were found in the summer months as compared to the rest of the year.

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During the study period, there were 191,558 deliveries of which 4,335 were diagnosed with idiopathic oligohydramnios.

Of these, a proportionally higher number, 1,553 deliveries (36 percent), occurred during these four summer months, while 2,782 deliveries occurred during the other eight months of the year (64 percent).

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"It is important for pregnant women to drink appropriate amounts of water specifically in the summer, about 10 glasses per day, and avoid direct sun, not only for the health of the mother, but also in order to avoid fetal dehydration," explained Prof. Eyal Sheiner of the Faculty of Health and Sciences at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev.

The retrospective population-based study was published in the latest issue of Archives of Gynecology and Obstetrics.

Source-ANI
ARU


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