Abstract
The fate of 80 infants delivered after induction of labour in 72 Rh-sensitized mothers was studied to determine whether the stillbirth rate could be reduced. Labour was induced at 32 to 39 weeks of gestation; the criteria for induction were based on the history of previously affected infants, and a maternal Rh-antibody titre of 1/40 or greater, using an indirect antiglobulin technique. Nine mothers were delivered by Cesarean section. It was estimated that 26 infants were so severely affected as to be unlikely to have survived to term. However, only seven died, and one was stillborn. Two of these would normally have survived, one being Rh-negative. These two cases demonstrated the main danger in this method of management. There was a probable saving of 18 infants. In 22 mothers there was no history of previous delivery of an affected infant; in all 22 the infants survived, though six probably would not have survived to term. In 15 pregnancies in which the mothers had had a previous stillbirth, 12 infants survived. Sixty-seven infants required a total of 116 exchange transfusions. Despite the hazards it is concluded that early induction has an important place in management of Rh hemolytic disease.
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Selected References
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