Changing associations of episiotomy and anal sphincter injury across risk strata: results of a population-based register study in Finland 2004–2011
نویسندگان
چکیده
OBJECTIVES To evaluate the changing association between lateral episiotomy and obstetric anal sphincter injury (OASIS) for women with low and high baseline risk of OASIS. DESIGN A population-based register study. SETTING Data gathered from the Finnish Medical Birth Register for the years 2004-2011. PARTICIPANTS All women with spontaneous vaginal or vacuum-assisted singleton births in Finland (n=384 638). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE OASIS incidence. RESULTS During the study period, the incidence of OASIS increased from 1.3% to 1.7% in women with first vaginal births, including women admitted for first vaginal birth after a prior caesarean section and from 0.1% to 0.3% in women with at least one prior birth, whereas episiotomy rates declined from 56.7% to 45.5% and 10.1- 5.3%, respectively. At the study onset, when episiotomy was used more widely, it was negatively associated with OASIS in women with first vaginal births, but as episiotomy use declined it became positively associated with OASIS. Women with episiotomy were complicated by OASIS with clearly higher risk scores than women without episiotomy suggesting that episiotomy was clearly protective against OASIS. OASIS occurred with lower mean risk scores among women with and without episiotomy over time. However, OASIS incidences increased only among women with episiotomy, whereas it decreased or remained among women without episiotomy. CONCLUSIONS The cross-over effect between episiotomy and OASIS could be explained by increasing disparity in baseline OASIS risk between treated and untreated women, since episiotomy use declined most in women at low OASIS risk. Episiotomy rate can be safely reduced in low-risk women but interestingly along with the policy change the practice to cut the episiotomy became less protective among high-risk women.
منابع مشابه
The Association of Episiotomy with Obstetric Anal Sphincter Injury–A Population Based Matched Cohort Study
OBJECTIVES To estimate the independent association of episiotomy with obstetric anal sphincter injuries (OASIS) using first a cross-sectional and then a matched pair analysis. DESIGN A matched cohort. SETTING Data was gathered from the Finnish Medical Birth Register from 2004-2011. POPULATION All singleton vaginal births (n = 303,758). METHODS Women resulting matched pairs (n = 63,925) ...
متن کاملObstetric anal sphincter injury
Obstetric trauma following childbirth is the primary cause of faecal incontinence in women. Injury to the anal sphincter complex is common: it has been clinically diagnosed in 0.4–2.5% of vaginal deliveries involving a mediolateral episiotomy and in up to 19% of cases of midline episiotomy. Studies using endoanal ultrasound have reported occult anal sphincter injury in up to 35% of women after ...
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OBJECTIVE To assess the association of oxytocin augmentation with obstetric anal sphincter injury among nulliparous women. DESIGN Population-based, case-control study. SETTING Primary and secondary teaching hospital serving a Norwegian region. POPULATION 15 476 nulliparous women with spontaneous start of labour, single cephalic presentation and gestation ≥37 weeks delivering vaginally bet...
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BACKGROUND Obstetric anal sphincter injury (OASI) is a rare but serious outcome of vaginal birth. Based on concerns about the increasing number of women who commence childbearing later than previous generation, this study aimed at investigating age-related risk of OASI in women of different parity. METHODS A population-based register study including 959,559 live singleton vaginal births recor...
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Avoiding obstetrical injury to the anal sphincter is the single biggest factor in preventing anal incontinence among women. Any form of instrument delivery has consistently been noted to increase the risk of obstetric anal sphincter injury and altered fecal continence by between 2- and 7-fold. Routine episiotomy is not recommended. Episiotomy use should be restricted to situations where it dire...
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عنوان ژورنال:
دوره 3 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2013