Striae gravidarum as a predictor of spontaneous preterm delivery: A case control study

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DOI: 10.4236/ojog.2012.24081    3,528 Downloads   5,562 Views  Citations

ABSTRACT

Background/Aims: The association between striae gravidarum (SG) and preterm delivery may be postulated because of sharing similar poor organization of extracellular matrix in both skin and cervix. Our goal was to compare the frequency of striae gravidarum in women who gave preterm birth and women who gave term birth. Methods: A case-control study was conducted in women who gave preterm birth (n = 66) and age matched women who gave term birth (n = 68). Cases and controls were recruited from puerperal women consequently seen at delivery wards of perinatology unit. All women underwent dermatologic examination in terms of SG blindly to theirs gestational weeks of delivery. The frequency of SG was compared in all groups. Results: The frequency of SG was 63.6% in women with preterm birth and 54.4% in women with term birth (p = 0.278). SG is five times more common in late preterm group than in women with term group, but this difference was not statistically significant [(p = 0.227, OR: 5.02, CI 95% (0.5 - 44.0)]. The rate of preventive cream usage was not statistically different in women with SG and without SG (p = 0.245). Conclusions: It seems that there was no statistically significant association between the risk of preterm labor and the presence of striae gravidarum. Larger prospective observational studies are needed to state expressly the probable clinical association between the presence of SG and preterm delivery.

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Kelekci, S. , Gencdal, S. , Ozdemir, O. , Destegul, E. and Handan Kelekci, K. (2012) Striae gravidarum as a predictor of spontaneous preterm delivery: A case control study. Open Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 2, 394-397. doi: 10.4236/ojog.2012.24081.

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