Dilatation of the abdominal umbilical vein is associated with increased risk of thrombotic complications
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Patrizia Nitsch
, Johannes Breuer , Anna Geipel , Peter Bartmann , Ulrich Gembruch und Axel Heep
Abstract
Malformations of the umbilical vein are rare abnormalities diagnosed on prenatal ultrasound. They might be associated with fetal hydrops and fetal death. We report two newborn infants with prenatal diagnosis of umbilical vein dilatation who developed venous thrombosis and discuss the pre- and postnatal management of the constellation with special emphasis on antithrombotic treatment
References
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©2006 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin New York
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Artikel in diesem Heft
- The chemical erosion of human health: adverse environmental exposure and in-utero pollution – determinants of congenital disorders and chronic disease
- Cesarean section in term breech presentations: do rates of adverse neonatal outcomes differ by hospital birth volume?
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- Relation between grief and subsequent pregnancy status 13 months after perinatal bereavement
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- Vaginal birth after cesarean section: X-ray pelvimetry at term is informative
- Dilatation of the abdominal umbilical vein is associated with increased risk of thrombotic complications
- Retrospective diagnosis of hypoxic myocardial injury in premature newborns
- Fetal brain injury in experimental intrauterine asphyxia and inflammation in Göttingen minipigs
- Intrauterine growth restriction induces increased capillary density and accelerated type I fiber maturation in newborn pig skeletal muscles
- Closing arguments for gastroschisis: management with silo reduction
- Mean platelet and red blood cell volume measurements to estimate the severity of hypertension in pregnancy
- Torsion of a pedunculated accessory hepatic lobe: differential diagnosis of projectile vomiting in a neonate
- Massive fetomaternal hemorrhage following failed external cephalic version: case report
- Resolution of peripheral tissue ischemia secondary to arterial vasospasm following treatment with a topical nitroglycerin device in two newborns: case reports
- Echocardiography and N-terminal pro BNP
- Frontal-dominant white matter lesions following congenital rubella and cytomegalovirus infection
- Perinatal Programming
- Congress Calendar