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Intrauterine Growth Retardation

Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1961
Introduction It is a well-established fact that occasionally children are born at full term whose weight is below 2,500 gm. Such children are for practical reasons labeled as "premature" or "immature," and treated accordingly. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends the following definition for prematurity: "A premature infant is one who weighs ...
J, WARKANY, B B, MONROE, B S, SUTHERLAND
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Intrauterine Growth Retardation: Clinical and Experimental

Acta Paediatrica, 1985
ABSTRACT. Intrauterine growth retardation is a common and potentially hazardous problem for the fetus. Despite this, the obstetric factors associated with growth retardation have changed little in the last twenty years. Some of the other factors, the so‐called behavioural factors should be amenable to correction through education or changing social ...
J S, Robinson, J, Falconer, J A, Owens
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Folate and intrauterine growth retardation

Annals of Tropical Paediatrics, 2000
The objectives of this case-control study were to compare the levels of folate in cord and maternal blood of 315 mothers who had intrauterine growth-retarded (IUGR) babies and 321 mothers who had appropriate-for-gestational-age (AGA) babies, to evaluate the correlation between cord and maternal folate and to assess the prevalence of folate deficiency ...
P H, Rondo, A M, Tomkins
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Intrauterine Growth Retardation

Pediatrics In Review, 1986
Intrauterine growth retardation can result from a variety of environmental and genetic influences on fetal growth. The sequelae of intrauterine growth retardation resulting from impairment of nutrient flow include low birth weight with sparing of brain growth, polycythemia, and hypoglycemia resulting from decreased storage fuels and defective ...
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Experimental Intrauterine Growth Retardation

Biology of the Neonate, 2009
The effects of experimental intrauterine growth retardation on subsequent fetal development, especially with respect to brain development, were studied in a new animal model. The rabbit was chosen since it has a perinatal pattern of brain development similar to that of the human.
E, van Marthens, S, Harel, S, Zamenshof
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Intrauterine Growth Retardation Index

Ultrasound Quarterly, 2001
The objective of the study discussed was to develop an intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR) index to detect fetuses with IUGR. The study was conducted in Australia and was based on 219 pregnant women at Wollongong Hospital in the Illawarra region in New South Wales, Australia.
P, Niknafs, J, Sibbald
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The Incidence of Intrauterine Growth Retardation in Sivas

Journal of Tropical Pediatrics, 1990

GULTEKIN, A   +5 more
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Intrauterine Growth Retardation

American Journal of Diseases of Children, 1981
Most standards of fetal growth are grossly inadequate. Standards of fetal growth should be revised so that they represent normally grown fetuses and newborn infants; their data should be displayed in a uniform manner, and proper allowances should be made for intrinsic factors that affect fetal size significantly, namely gestational age, ethnic group ...
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CIRCUMVALLATE PLACENTA AND INTRAUTERINE GROWTH RETARDATION

Acta Obstetricia et Gynecologica Scandinavica, 1978
A study has been made of a prospectively selected material of circumvallate placentae; the latter being defined as an elevated edge of more than 50% of the circumference. The material consists of 447 placentae from liveborn singleton infants, where 287 were from exemplary pregnancies, and 160 from births with a gestational age (GA) of less than 266 ...
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Intrauterine growth retardation.

Bailliere's clinical obstetrics and gynaecology, 1996
IUGR puts the fetus at risk of stillbirth, perinatal morbidity and neonatal handicap, yet most instances of IUGR are not recognized. Progress has been made in recent years to monitor the high-risk fetus with intensive biometric and biophysical tests and to determine the appropriate time for intervention.
J O, Gardosi, J M, Mongelli, T, Mul
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