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Sleep disordered breathing (SDB) is a frequent disorder characterized by some combination of repeated events of partial or complete upper airway obstruction during sleep, disruption of normal ventilation, hypoxemia, and sleep fragmentation. When untreated, SDB is associated with serious cardiovascular and neurobehavioral morbidities. Many physiologic changes that occur during pregnancy may compromise the respiratory system and place women at risk for developing SDB. Indeed, snoring has been reported in up to 46% of pregnant women. Preliminary evidence suggests that SDB is associated with the hypertensive conditions of pregnancy and that oxidative stress and endothelial dysfunction are mechanisms important in the development of both conditions. Moreover, early reports in animals and in humans suggest that maternal SDB may affect the developing fetus and that the intermittent hypoxia and increased sympathetic activity induced by SDB could potentially contribute to adverse maternal-fetal outcome. However, previous reports have focused on crude and non specific measures of fetal outcome such as birth weight and APGAR (Appearance, Pulse, Grimace, Activity, Respiration) score and currently there is no data on the mechanisms underlying the adverse effect of maternal SDB on the fetus and the newborn infant.
Hypothesis: SDB during pregnancy imposes a risk to the developing fetus and the newborn infant through mechanisms mediated by maternal hypoxia.
Objectives:
Full description
Sleep questionnaire: The questionnaire is based on validated questionnaires and includes information on snoring, sleep pauses and daytime sleepiness.Completed questionnaires will be reviewed weekly, and women with either severe daytime sleepiness or self reported frequent snoring or any degree of sleep apnea will be contacted and be requested to undergo clinical evaluation and an overnight polysomnography (estimated - 100 women). This evaluation will consist of an in-depth sleep related and general medical history and physical examination including body mass measurements (height, weight, neck circumference).
Tissue and umbilical cord blood collection: Placentas will be evaluated by a single pathologist. The pathologist will be blind to the medical and perinatal history but not to gestational age. Each placenta will be examined using a criteria previously reported.
Cord blood will be obtained at birth from the double clamped umbilical vein and will be processed immediately for fetal blood gases analysis. Immediately following delivery, 5 mL of blood will be obtained from the umbilical cord of all babies.
Neuro-behavioral evaluation of the newborn will be conducted at the first 48 hours of life.
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1,000 participants in 4 patient groups
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Riva Tauman, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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