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PREGNANCY
MORNING SICKNESS
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Paediatr Perinat Epidemiol. 2006 Jul;20(4):270-8.
Nausea and vomiting in pregnancy: maternal characteristics and risk
factors.
Louik C, Hernandez-Diaz S, Werler MM, Mitchell AA.
Slone Epidemiology Centre, Boston University, MA 02115, USA. clouik@slone.bu.edu
Nausea with or without vomiting (NVP) is probably the most frequently
reported medical complaint of pregnancy, but few studies have considered
risk factors for its development. We used data from an ongoing
epidemiological study of pregnancies in four regional centres. Mothers
of infants with congenital malformations (n = 17,158) and a sample of
normal infants (n = 5,329) were interviewed within 6 months of delivery
by trained nurse-interviewers using a standardised questionnaire. For
all risk factors investigated, odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals
were calculated using multiple logistic regression, controlling for
potential confounders. The cumulative incidence (risk) of NVP was 67%.
The risk of NVP and its timing during pregnancy were similar for mothers
of malformed and normal infants, so data were combined. No changes in
the NVP risk were observed over the 20-year study period. The risk
decreased with increasing age, but increased with increasing gravidity.
The risk also increased with increasing number of prior miscarriages.
Further, within each gravidity category, the risk was higher for twin
births than for singletons. Women who reported onset of NVP after the
first trimester differed demographically from women whose NVP began
earlier: they were less-well educated, had lower incomes, and were more
likely to be black. The finding that the number of prior pregnancies,
both complete and incomplete, and number of fetuses independently appear
to increase the risk of NVP suggests a fetal 'dose' effect. Together
with selected demographic characteristics that differentiate early- vs.
late-onset NVP, these findings warrant further investigation.
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