Academic literature on the topic 'Uterine Inertia'

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Journal articles on the topic "Uterine Inertia"

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Davidson, Autumn P. "Primary Uterine Inertia in Four Labrador Bitches." Journal of the American Animal Hospital Association 47, no. 2 (March 1, 2011): 83–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.5326/jaaha-ms-5122.

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Uterine inertia is a common cause of dystocia in the bitch and is designated as primary (i.e., uterine contractions fail to ever be initiated) or secondary (i.e., uterine contractions cease after a period of time but before labor is completed). The etiology of primary uterine inertia is not well understood. The accurate diagnosis of primary uterine inertia requires the use of tocodynamometry (uterine monitoring). Primary uterine inertia has been postulated to result from a failure of luteolysis resulting in persistently elevated progesterone concentrations. In this study, primary uterine inertia was diagnosed in a series of four bitches in which luteolysis was documented suggesting some other etiopathogenesis for primary uterine inertia.
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Raval, R. J., K. B. Vala, K. H. Parmar, and S. H. Talekar. "Surgical Management of Secondary Uterine Inertia in Two Bitches." INDIAN JOURNAL OF VETERINARY SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY 15, no. 01 (July 7, 2019): 85–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.21887/ijvsbt.15.1.22.

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Primary or secondary uterine inertia is due to lack of normal physiological uterine contraction during or after parturition. Secondary uterine inertia is commonly observed in bovine, however, it is comparatively less reported in canine. In certain breeds of dog such as the Scotch terrier or Dachshund secondary uterine inertia may occur spontaneously early in the second stage of parturition. Usually, one or two fetuses are expelled normally and then labor ceases even though more fetuses are present in the uterus (Roberts, 1982). The present report places on record the difficult whelping due to secondary uterine inertia and its radiographic diagnosis and successful surgical management in 2 bitches.
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Mujur, Adryani. "Identification of Maternity Mothers with Uterine Inertia at the Kendari City Regional General Hospital." Indonesian Journal of Contemporary Multidisciplinary Research 2, no. 2 (March 30, 2023): 253–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.55927/modern.v2i2.3223.

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Uterine inertia is a uterine abnormality in which there is insufficient strength to open the cervix or push the fetus out. The causes of uterine inertia are his abnormalities, emotional factors and strength, misdirected labor, abnormal location of the CPD, disturbances in the formation of the uterus during the embryonic period, wrong administration of oxytocin and sedative drugs, excessive stretching of the uterus in multiple pregnancies or hydramnios, and postmature pregnancy. The effects of uterine inertia are prolonged labor, exhaustion, dehydration, and intrapartum infections. To Identify Maternity Mothers With Inertia Uteri at the General Hospital of Kendari City. This type of research implemented in June 2022 at General Hospital Kendari city. the study population was all women with maternal inertia in General Hospital kendari city with a total of 37 ceses. the sampling technique is total sampling.the type of data is quantitative data the data source of research is secondary data. The mother's age, 27 cases occurred at the age of 20-35 years and a few cases occurred at the age of > 35 because of 8 cases. for maternal parity, there was a lot of parity I as many as 14 cases and a few cases in > IV parity of 5 cases. for maternal education, it mostly occurred in SMP as many as 15 cases and a little occurred in DIII / SI as many as 3 cases. for maternal occupation, it occurred mostly in IRT as many as 26 cases and a little occurred in self-employed as many as 3 cases
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Bawaskar, M. S., S. K. Sahatpure, M. S. Patil, S. V. Upadhye, S. B. Akhare, and D. V. Patil. "Therapeutic Management of Uterine Inertia in Bitches." Indian Journal of Canine Practice 9, no. 2 (December 1, 2017): 131. http://dx.doi.org/10.29005/ijcp.2017.9.2.131-133.

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Savitri, Dina Ayu, Yonas Hadisybroto, and Pipiet Wulandari. "The Difference Incidence of Maternal Uterine Inertia Between Labor With and Without Anemia in Hospital of dr. Soebandi Jember." Journal of Agromedicine and Medical Sciences 5, no. 3 (September 19, 2019): 172. http://dx.doi.org/10.19184/ams.v5i3.9514.

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One of the indirect causes of maternal death is anemia. Anemia in pregnancy is a woman with a hemoglobin level below 11 g / dl caused by iron deficiency in pregnant women so that the hemoglobin level becomes low and cannot meet the need for oxygen to perfusion to the tissues. This consumes energy in the affected muscles and buildup of lactic acid which causes fatigue and reduced muscle contraction during labor. Inadequate uterine contractions are called uterine inertia and are characterized by a prolonged phase of labor, which is weak, rarely and short duration. The purpose of this study was to determine the differences in the incidence of uterine inertia between labor and anemia released in RSD dr. Soebandi Jember. This study was analytic observational with a cross sectional research design. The study population was all pregnant women who had improved labor and were included in the medical record at RSD Dr. Soebandi Jember period January 1, 2017 - December 31, 2017. Samples from this study were mothers who had approved the delivery and fulfilled the inclusion and exclusion criteria that had been determined until the number of samples could be fulfilled. The number of samples in this study were 76 samples. The type of data used in this study is secondary data obtained by researchers from the medical records of pregnant women who have received labor. The data included in this study contain demographic data consisting of the age of pregnant women and parity, clinical data in the form of uterine inertia and laboratory data consisting of anemia status. In analyzing the data with Chi Square test (X²), a significance value of 0.011 was obtained so that it can be concluded that Ho is rejected and Ha is accepted which means that the incidence of uterine inertia between free labor and anemia is not important in RSD Dr. Soebandi Jember. Keywords: anemia, uterine inertia, pregnancy, age, parity.
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Ventoskovskiy, B. M., and A. V. Popov. "Homœopathy as a practical alternative to traditional obstetric methods." British Homeopathic Journal 79, no. 04 (October 1990): 201–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0007-0785(05)80452-1.

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AbstractA clinical trial was carried out to determine the efficacy of predelivery homœopathic and ‘traditional’ prophylaxis of uterine inertia and post partum haemorrhage. Under our observation, there were 206 pregnant women characterized by high risk of uterine contractile function disturbances. The 1st group of pregnant women (n=102) received only homœopathy. The 2nd group (n=104) received conventional medical preparations including oestrogenic hormones. We studied a use of homœopathic drug complex possessing ‘relatively narrow range of influence’.Clinical examination, foetal cardiomonitoring and ultrasound scanning were carried out in each case. The normal methods were used to treat uterine inertia, foetal distress and post partum haemorrhage.In our opinion homœopathy can be an effective method for prophylaxis of disturbances of uterine contractile function in delivery and at the postnatal stage for pregnant women at high risk of complications.
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Prashantkumar, A. Krishnaswamy, T. G. Honnappa, V. C. Murthy, M. Narayana Bhat, and L. Rangnath. "BIOCHEMICAL CHANGES IN PRIMARY UTERINE INERTIA IN BITCHES." Indian Journal of Canine Practice 10, no. 1 (June 1, 2018): 029. http://dx.doi.org/10.29005/ijcp.2018.10.1.029-033.

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Bergström, A., B. Fransson, A. S. Lagerstedt, H. Kindahl, Ulf Olsson, and K. Olsson. "Hormonal concentrations in bitches with primary uterine inertia." Theriogenology 73, no. 8 (May 2010): 1068–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.theriogenology.2010.01.006.

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Kolagani, Hima Bindu, Chandra Prasad Borra, and Srinivas Manda. "Dystocia Due to Secondary Uterine Inertia and its Obstetrical Management- A Case Report." SSR Institute of International Journal of Life Sciences 9, no. 1 (January 2023): 3136–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.21276/ssr-iijls.2023.9.1.1.

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Li, Pin, Lele Wang, Xueya Qian, Abraham Morse, Robert E. Garfield, and Huishu Liu. "A study of uterine inertia on the spontaneous of labor using uterine electromyography." Taiwanese Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology 60, no. 3 (May 2021): 449–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tjog.2021.03.010.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Uterine Inertia"

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Escanhoela, Cecília Amélia Fazzio 1958. "Alterações morfologicas endometriais associadas ao uso do dispositivo intra-uterino (DIU) inerte e liberador de cobre : estudo de 40 casos com grupo controle pareado pela datação morfologica." [s.n.], 1994. http://repositorio.unicamp.br/jspui/handle/REPOSIP/310451.

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Orientador: Liliane Aparecida Lucci De Angelo Andrade
Tese (doutorado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Faculdade de Ciencias Medicas
Made available in DSpace on 2018-07-19T08:27:25Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Escanhoela_CeciliaAmeliaFazzio_D.pdf: 5280642 bytes, checksum: 4182524c7607a4d0c816e5fa4755ce17 (MD5) Previous issue date: 1994
Resumo: Curetagens e biópsias endometriais de 40 usuárias de DIUs (28 TCu e 12 alça de Lippes) foram examinadas, juntamente com grupo controle de 44 casos, pareado pela datação morfológica. A idade variou de 21 a 52 anos, e o tempo de inserção do DIU, de 1,5 a 240 meses. Foram diagnosticados 11 casos com quadros patológicos, sendo 3 hiperplasias endometriais e 6 decorrentes de corpo lúteo persistente. Entre as 27 pacientes nas quais se pode realizar a datação da mucosa, 55,6% exibiram assincronismo endometrial, representado tanto por avanço como retardo de maturação. Foram pesquisadas 18 variáveis morfológicas, sendo que erosões e/ou ulcerações superficiais, atipias epiteliais superficiais regenerativas, aplainamento da mucosa, infiltrado eosinofllico, metaplasia do tipo "hobnail" e aumento do número de luzes vasculares superficiais, mostraram-se significantemente associadas ao uso do DIU, sem relação com o tempo de uso
Abstract: This study is based on D & C and endometrial biopsies from 40 women making use of IUDs (being 28 TCu and 12 Lippes' loop). The control group consisted of 44 cases, paired according to morpho1ogical dating. Age ranged from 21 to 52 years and duration of IUD usage from 1,5 to 240 months. There were 11 cases with pathological findings, including 3 cases of endometrial hyperplasia and 6 with persistence of corpus luteum. Among the 27 patients in whom mucosal dating was possible, 55,6% showed endometrial asynchronism with either early or late maturation. Eighteen morphological parametres were examined, of which the following were found to be significantly associated with IUD, independently of lengh of usage: superficial erosions and/or ulcerations, superficial regenerative epithelial atypias, mucosal flattening, eosinophilic inflltrate, hobnail metaplasia and increase in the number of superficial vascular lumina
Doutorado
Anatomia Patologica
Doutor em Ciências Médicas
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2

Lundström, Maria. "The association between neuroticismand secondary uterine inertia." Thesis, 2018. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-383996.

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Book chapters on the topic "Uterine Inertia"

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Millar, Michael. "Device- Associated Infections." In Tutorial Topics in Infection for the Combined Infection Training Programme. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198801740.003.0045.

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A great variety of biomedical devices are used in patient care. Almost all hospitalized patients will have a vascular catheter placed to support administration of drugs, fluids, electrolytes, blood products, feeding solutions, or for haemodynamic monitoring. Many will also be exposed to urinary catheters, or tracheal tubes. There is also increasing use of a variety of prosthetic devices. Different biomedical devices have different infection associations. Examples of associations include cardiac pacemakers with Staphylococcus aureus blood-stream infection, contact lenses with amoebic keratitis, tampons with toxic shock, and historically, intra-uterine devices with pelvic actinomycosis. The most common causative organisms associated with device infections are bacteria (less commonly fungi). For many devices coagulase-negative staphylococci are the most frequent cause of infection. It is important to remember that an enormous range of microbes have been reported to cause device-associated infection. Biomedical devices predispose to infection through a wide range of mechanisms. These may include (depending on the device) traversing of anatomical barriers (such as the skin), protected niches for microbial proliferation, inappropriate immune activation, and provision of a surface(s) for biofilm formation. Few devices are completely inert. Most devices elicit an immune response, which depletes local complement levels and reduces oxidative killing by neutrophils, some directly damage tissues, and some release biologically-active products. There is much interest in the molecular mechanisms and physical interactions that underlie the formation of communal microbial structures on biomaterial surfaces. Many difference strategies have been proposed both to prevent, and to destroy microbial biofilms associated with biomedical devices. Complications associated with devices are most likely to be mechanical or infective. It is estimated that up to 25% of patients with a central venous catheter (CVC) will suffer a serious mechanical or infection related complication. Risk factors for infection include host, device, and operator factors. Extremes of age, co-morbidities such as diabetes, active infection at the time of insertion, and loss of relevant anatomical barriers to infection are host risk factors that apply to most devices. Operator risk factors include poor compliance with insertion or post-insertion ‘best practice’.
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