Bariatric surgery affects risk of pregnancy complications

Bariatric surgery has both a positive and negative influence on the risk of complications during subsequent pregnancy and delivery, concludes a new study from Karolinska Institutet in Sweden. The results, which are published in the New England Journal of Medicine, indicate that maternal health services should regard such cases as risk pregnancies.

Pregnant women with obesity run a higher risk of developing complications during pregnancy and risks of fetal/infant complications are also higher. There has been a sharp rise in the number of women becoming pregnant after ; in 2013 almost 8,000 such operations were performed in Sweden, 80 per cent of which were on women.

"The effects of bariatric on health outcomes such as diabetes and cardiovascular disease have been studied, but less is known about the effects on pregnancy and ," says the study's lead author, Kari Johansson, PhD, from the Department of Medicine in Solna. "Therefore we wanted to investigate if the surgery influenced in any way the risk of gestational diabetes, preterm birth, stillbirth, if the baby was small or large for its , congenital malformations and neonatal death."

Using data from nationwide Swedish health registries, the researchers identified 596 pregnancies to women who had given birth after bariatric surgery between 2006 and 2011. These pregnancies were then compared with 2,356 pregnancies to women who had not been operated upon but who had the same (BMI, weight divided by height squared) as the first group prior to surgery.

What researchers found was that the women who had undergone surgery were much less likely to develop - 2% compared to 7% - and give birth to large babies. Just over 22% of women in the comparison group had babies that were large for gestational age, and barely 9% of the operated women. On the other hand, the operated women were twice as likely to give birth to babies who were small for gestational age, and the pregnancies were also of shorter duration.

"Since bariatric surgery followed by pregnancy has both positive and negative effects, these women, when expecting, should be regarded as risk pregnancies," says Dr Johansson. "They ought to be given special care from the maternal health services, such as extra ultrasound scans to monitor fetal growth, detailed dietary advice that includes checking the intake of the necessary post-surgery supplements."

Journal information: New England Journal of Medicine
Citation: Bariatric surgery affects risk of pregnancy complications (2015, February 25) retrieved 19 March 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2015-02-bariatric-surgery-affects-pregnancy-complications.html
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