Saturday, June 30, 2012

Gardening Rainbows

A recent double rainbow in my back yard at twilight.
Light at the end of the tunnel for this stressful year!

I finally got out to my garden this week after an intensely busy and high-pressured winter and spring. What a stressful year I had at work!  I'm always busy, but this year I was busy with a capital "B", and stress arrived in an economy-sized package.  Alas, that limited many of the other projects I had going (including my writing); so frustrating.  Apologies for some minimalist blogging content this spring.

I had so many things I wanted to try in the garden this year, but getting such a late late start meant that some of them just aren't going to get done this year. Feh.

However, once in a while I managed to steal a moment here and there to plant something this spring, so I do have carrots and peas going in various stages.  I had some garlic and onions overwinter, so that's helpful.  Surprisingly, I had some brussel sprouts overwinter too, so we'll see if that turns into anything. Of course I have my perennial fruits and veggies, like asaparagus, raspberries, strawberries, cherries, etc.  These form the core of my garden this year.

Asparagus Ferns to the left,
and the Rhubarb of Doom to the right

We were able to harvest asparagus this year. I planted it last year and you don't harvest the first year, so this was the first time we got to eat our own home-grown asparagus.  You harvest only minimally the second year, so we were sparing in our harvest, but I can see this is going to be a source of much delight to us. We love asparagus at our house!  Served al dente with a little garlic aeoli, or grilled with a little olive oil....Oh, sooo sooo good.  I'm just sad asparagus season is over now. But that's okay...they are busy building roots so they can give us lots of yummies next year. You can see the ferns that asparagus spears turn into in the picture above on the left.

I also planted rhubarb plants last fall, but that was a bit of a fail. I've never grown rhubarb before, so I didn't realize just how HUGE they get.  But you can see the Rhubarb of Doom in the picture above.  Uh, a little large for a raised bed planter, ya think? Obviously, it doesn't need the babying of being in a raised bed, based on its dinosaur-sized leaves.  So we're going to have to dig this puppy up and move it to a better spot.  I'm not looking forward to that job.


You can see the first strawberries of the season above. We're harvesting strawberries like crazy now. I will have enough to make a large batch of freezer jam that's just from our garden; in the past, I've had to supplement with berries from various Farmer's Markets.  I probably will again for later batches, but it's very satisfying to be able to do a few batches that are just from our garden.  I love strawberry freezer jam the best because you can use minimal sugar and the freezer jam keeps more of the fresh strawberry flavor. It's like a eating a little burst of summer in the middle of the winter. Flippin' awesome.


We also just started harvesting the first raspberries.  OMG, is there anything better than the first raspberries of the season???  Usually we just eat these fresh, but I put in a whole bunch more raspberries last year and so will need to put some up somehow...especially since we'll be harvesting raspberries into October.  Made some raspberry muffins yesterday, may try some raspberry sauce, some white chocolate raspberry bark, some raspberry chipotle sauce, and will also just freeze some straight up.  Any other great raspberry suggestions?  I'm going to have a lot.

We are knee-deep in cherries from our trees right now. I have to figure out what to do with them before they go bad. I don't much care for cooked cherries (so canning them is out) but love the fresh ones. I think we are going to freeze them raw.  Just wash them, pit them, put them on some parchment paper on a cookie tray and stick them in the freezer to freeze individually, and then bag them for later in the year.  I've heard that eating fresh-frozen cherries (no sugar, no additives) right out of the freezer is a real treat.  I'll let you know!

I have lots of plums starting to ripen, and many apples have set, so I'm looking forward to canning some plum chutney and applesauce later in the summer.  Looks like we'll have a few fresh pears too. However, my pluots (mix of an apricot and a plum) are total duds so far.  Maybe next year.


We did finally get some other stuff planted.  I was so late that I mostly used starts from the store, but that's okay; I'm not a gardening snob.  I have broccoli that's almost ready; the head has gotten a lot bigger than when I took the above picture.  We love fresh broccoli, which is good because we'll be having a lot in the next few weeks before we get slammed by hot weather.

I planted eggplant for the first time this year.  I'm not a big eggplant fan, but thought we'd give it a try. If all else fails, my MIL will eat them. Also put in a zillion tomatoes (for my special homemade spaghetti sauce, yummm), potatoes, pumpkins, green beans, swiss chard, zucchini, and cukes.

As some of you know, I have some knee issues from a bad car accident a few years ago.  This is why I mostly garden in raised beds.  But of course, raised beds are not cheap to build.  So this year, I'm contemplating trying straw bale gardening to expand my raised beds inexpensively.

Image from WSU Master Garden blog, wsumgtc.wordpress.com 

You condition a straw bale, then plant certain types of garden plants in the straw bales, like pumpkins or cukes or tomatoes (with staking).  It's raised bed gardening on the cheap. Then you use the decomposing straw left over for your potato beds next year, or put it in your compost pile. It's late to start this process, but what the heck.  I'm going to give it a shot anyhow.

I'm also looking at creating some sort of adapted portable cold frame/hoop house for my garden. I want to be able to cover the tomatoes to extend their season in the fall, and I want to be able to grow some cold-weather crops in the winter but be able to protect them from the very coldest weather.  So we'll be experimenting with that this summer.  Updates next fall.

So that's what's up with me right now.  I'm trying to get the kids' summer schedule organized (one's in Alaska with Scouts right now), I'm trying to get the garden established and weeded, I'm trying to start canning, and I've got to get my office cleaned before the cameras from the Hoarding shows arrive.  Oh yeah, and work on some writing projects.

What are you up to this summer? Got any big plans? If you garden, tell me what's going in in your garden!  Anybody got any great recipes for raspberries?

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Induction of Labor: An Incredibly Common Intervention Today


Here is a big, major recent study from the NIH that shows just how pervasive induction of labor is in U.S. society today and how it influences cesarean rates.

This study covered 19 hospitals across the U.S. over the space of a number of years.  It shows that nearly half of all first-time mothers are having their labors induced these days, and almost a third of those who have children before (multips).

Of those who are induced, a third of first-time mothers and nearly half of multips had an "elective" induction or "no recorded indication for induction" at term.  In other words, most of the time, these inductions are not being done for legitimate medical reasons like high blood pressure or serious concerns about the baby's well-being; instead, they're largely being done for convenience.

Yes, some moms ask for induction because they get tired of being pregnant, so some of this is being driven by consumers.  But it's also being strongly driven by many OBs who want to practice "daylight obstetrics" ─ induce in the early morning (or start the night before), break their water at noon, and be home in time for dinner.  Many start mentioning induction early in the pregnancy, planting the idea, so that when the end of pregnancy comes and women are uncomfortable, they are primed and ready to agree to an induction before it's really needed.

The question is whether nearly half of women should be induced, and what kind of risks are being imposed by this strong drive for induction of labor.

It also shows that inducing first-time moms presents a particularly high risk for cesarean, that cesareans are often done too early ("failure to wait"), and that inducing on an unripe cervix (low Bishop's Score) also often leads to cesareans.

[These are particularly relevant points for "obese" women, as I've pointed out before.]

All these have strong implications for lowering the national cesarean rate, as the authors note in their conclusion.  But are most care providers listening?  As I've said previously:
The $64,000 question is ─ will the publication of this study make any difference? Will hospitals change their policies and induce less women? Will doctors wait longer before resorting to cesareans? Will doctors and hospital administrators reverse their formal and informal VBAC bans? Will everyone involved make a concerted effort to reduce the cesarean rate ─ or will it just continue to be business as usual? 
It's positive that the questions are being asked and dialogue is being opened ─ but I am not holding my breath. Perhaps this is the beginning of a reversal of the pendulum, but the momentum is so strong towards inductions and cesareans right now that it's going to take a mighty counterforce indeed to really reverse things.

It's up to us to be part of that counterforce for change.


Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2012 Mar 23. Induction of labor in a contemporary obstetric cohort. Laughon SK, Zhang J, Grewal J, Sundaram R, Beaver J, Reddy UM.  PMID: 22520652

Source: Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD.
OBJECTIVE: We sought to describe details of labor induction, including precursors and methods, and associated vaginal delivery rates. 
STUDY DESIGN: This was a retrospective cohort study of 208,695 electronic medical records from 19 hospitals across the United States, 2002 through 2008. 
RESULTS: Induction occurred in 42.9% of nulliparas and 31.8% of multiparas and elective or no recorded indication for induction at term occurred in 35.5% and 44.1%, respectively. Elective induction at term in multiparas was highly successful (vaginal delivery 97%) compared to nulliparas (76.2%). For all precursors, cesarean delivery was more common in nulliparas in the latent compared to active phase of labor. Regardless of method, vaginal delivery rates were higher with a ripe vs unripe cervix, particularly for multiparas (86.6-100%). 
CONCLUSION: Induction of labor was a common obstetric intervention. Selecting appropriate candidates and waiting longer for labor to progress into the active phase would make an impact on decreasing the national cesarean delivery rate.

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Pregnancy After WLS: The Risk for Internal Hernia

Image from Greenstein and O'Rourke,
Am J Surg, 2011
One of the risks that tends to be de-emphasized to women considering Gastric Bypass (GB) surgery is the risk of internal hernia, especially one that occurs during pregnancy.

What is an internal hernia?  Here is one definition:
An internal hernia is defined as a protrusion of intestine through a defect within the peritoneal cavity, as opposed to an external (or incisional) hernia that protrudes through all layers of the abdominal wall. Internal hernias almost always occur through iatrogenic defects created surgically.
The consequences of developing an internal hernia can include Small Bowel Obstruction (SBO), lack of adequate blood supply to the intestine and resulting necrotic tissue, gangrene, and a need for bowel resection.  In extreme cases, it can lead to death.

Granted, the risk for internal hernia is not a big risk, although it's difficult to pin down exactly what the risk really is.  One study found a 3.1% incidence of internal hernia after GB in a series of 2000 patients, while a different study found a 4.5% rate in a series of 1000 patients.  Another study found a higher rate of 6.9%.  A meta-analysis of 26 studies found an incidence of 2.5%, with a mortality rate of 1.1%.

However, these are internal hernia rates in the general GB population; the risk may be higher in pregnant women because pregnancy shifts the internal organs around and increases intra-abdominal pressure:
The incidence of internal hernia after [Laproscopic Gastric Bypass] is between 0.2 and 8.6 percent based on multiple studies...The particular case of pregnancy— with the mass effect of an enlarging uterus—may predispose to this condition...Due to the increasing scope of this problem and its potentially devastating consequences, surgeons should have a high clinical suspicion for internal hernia after LGBP.
Of course, it's important to remember that most women who have a Gastric Bypass and then a pregnancy afterwards will not experience an internal hernia.

However, there are some women who develop a hernia during pregnancy after Gastric Bypass, and it can be a very serious issue.  Women and babies have died from this complication (see case reports below). Therefore, it's important to raise awareness about this possible risk.

Any time a pregnant woman with a history of Gastric Bypass experiences significant abdominal pain, this must be taken very seriously.  

Physicians with experience both in WLS (Weight Loss Surgery), pregnancy, and intestinal issues should be consulted. Oftentimes, E.R. or family practice doctors miss internal hernias, CT scans are not always definitive, and as a result, there are a number of scary "near-miss" stories out there.  Most authorities agree that exploratory surgery is usually warranted, just in case, since a delayed or missed diagnosis is not unusual and can be deadly.

One of my concerns is whether or not this risk is adequately explained to women before they have WLS.  WLS is being actively marketed to fat women as a way to make childbearing "safer," yet are they really being told enough about this possible complication of pregnancy after GB?

And if they choose to go ahead, have the surgery, and then have a pregnancy, have they been sufficiently alerted to watch for abdominal pain and to seek help immediately if it occurs?

On a more cynical note, isn't it interesting that these cases are being recounted as case reports in the medical literature, but yet you rarely see them listed in the studies on pregnancy after WLS?  Granted, this complication is not so routine you'd see a lot of cases of it, but for every case report that is published, there are probably a number more that are not being written up.

Why isn't there more attention to this complication in the pregnancy-after-WLS literature? Given at least a 2-3% incidence of internal hernias after WLS in the general population and the number and seriousness of pregnancy-related case reports in the literature, you'd expect to see some of these documented in the large studies on pregnancy after WLS.  And yet, you almost never do.

Hmmmmmm.


References

*Note: Additional case reports can be found on Pubmed but were not listed here because they did not have an abstract available for review.

Case Reports on Internal Hernias During Pregnancy After GB

Acta Obstet Gynecol Scand. 2012 Apr 24. doi: 10.1111/j.1600-0412.2012.01421.x. Pregnant woman with fatal complication after laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass. Renault K, et al.    PMID: 22524680
...We report a 22 year old woman, who had previously undergone uncomplicated laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass. She was admitted with severe abdominal pain at 35 weeks of gestation. A cesarean section with delivery of a healthy baby in combination with an exploratory laparotomy was performed. Internal herniation was suspected, but not identified during surgery. Three days later she died of a severely gangrenous small bowel secondary to internal herniation. This fatal case illustrates a potential complication and difficulties in the managment of pregnant women who have undergone Roux-en-Y gastric bypass. In these women observation and investigations based on multidisciplinary approach is vital if abdominal pain develops, with involvement of intestinal surgeons experienced in bariatric surgery as well as radiologists with specific knowledge of relevant imaging procedures.
Am Surg. 2005 Mar;71(3):231-4. Small bowel ischemia after Roux-en-Y gastric bypass complicated by pregnancy: a case report. Charles A, et al.   PMID: 15869139
...This case report involves a 23-year-old female at 25 weeks gestation with a 1-day history of diffuse abdominal pain and vomiting. She had a RYGB with a 15 cc micropouch 6 months prior to the commencement of this pregnancy. All radiologic investigations were normal. Esophagogastroscopy was performed revealing an ischemic Roux limb of the gastric bypass. At laparotomy, an internal hernia involving the afferent limb was identified at the site of the Roux anastomosis compromising portions of both the afferent and Roux limbs. Nonviable portions of both the afferent and Roux limbs were resected. Gastrointestinal continuity was achieved by fashioning a gastro-gastrostomy and a jejuno-jejunostomy, thus reversing the original gastric bypass procedure. The immediate postoperative period was complicated by fetal demise. With the increase in bariatric surgery, small bowel ischemia after Roux-en-Y gastric bypass will most likely become more prevalent, particularly in women of childbearing age.
N Engl J Med. 2004 Aug 12;351(7):721-2. Maternal and fetal deaths after gastric bypass surgery for morbid obesity. Moore KA, Ouyang DW, Whang EE. PMID: 15306679  Full text available here.
[Letter to the NEJM, discussing a case report of internal hernia and complications in a woman at 31 weeks' gestation, 18 months after a gastric bypass. Both mother and fetus died.]
Surg Obes Relat Dis. 2009 May-Jun;5(3):378-80. Epub 2008 Sep 9. Internal hernia after gastric bypass surgery during middle trimester pregnancy resulting in fetal loss: risk of internal hernia never ends. Efthimiou E, Stein L, Court O, Christou N. PMID: 19026598
[No abstract available for this case report, but the title tells us the fetus died.]
Obstet Gynecol. 2005 May;105(5 Pt 2):1195-8. Pregnancy after gastric bypass surgery and internal hernia formation. Kakarla N, et al.  PMID: 15863579
BACKGROUND: Gastric bypass is a surgical procedure that is increasingly performed in the United States to treat morbid obesity. Because of the changes associated with pregnancy, women with a history of gastric bypass surgery may be at an increased risk of gastrointestinal complications during the antepartum period, as demonstrated by these cases. CASES: The first patient presented at 12 weeks of gestation with abdominal pain. Computed tomography scan revealed rotation of the small bowel mesentery. In the operating room, a Petersen's internal hernia was observed. The second patient presented at 34 weeks of gestation with epigastric pain, nausea, and vomiting. An abdominal computed tomography scan suggested distention of the biliopancreatic limb, duodenum, and bypassed stomach. She underwent exploratory laparotomy with repair of an internal (mesenteric loop) hernia. CONCLUSION: As obstetricians, we should be aware of the potential for internal hernias in pregnant patients who have undergone bariatric surgery.
Obes Surg. 2010 Dec;20(12):1740-2. Epub 2009 Mar 25. Late intestinal obstruction due to an intestinal volvulus in a pregnant patient with a previous Roux-en-Y gastric bypass. Gazzalle A, et al.  PMID: 19319613 
This is a case of a 33 weeks pregnant woman, presented 2 years after laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass, with abdominal pain for 2 days. A laparoscopic cholecystectomy was performed 1 day earlier in another hospital, without improving the pain. She presented at our hospital with acute abdominal pain and clinical signs of intestinal obstruction, undergoing an exploratory laparotomy that revealed a volvulus and necrosis of the jejunum from the gastroenteroanastomosis through the lateral enteroenterostomy, which was resected with the reconstruction of the Roux-en-Y limb performed at the same operation. Patient and neonate presented with improvement after surgery and the patient was discharged on postoperative day 15. Internal hernias after bariatric surgery have been reported as the cause of acute abdomen problems during pregnancy, which may progress to necrosis and perforation. The delay of surgical intervention could have brought a tragic outcome for mother and neonate.
Obes Surg. 2010 Dec;20(12):1737-9. Epub 2009 Jan 28. Small-bowel volvulus in late pregnancy due to internal hernia after laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass. Naef M, Mouton WG, Wagner HE.   PMID: 19184255
Internal hernias are a specific cause of acute abdominal pain and are a well-known complication after laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass for morbid obesity. Although internal hernias are a rare cause of intestinal obstruction, they may evolve towards serious complications, such as extensive bowel ischemia and gangrene, with the need for bowel resection and sometimes for a challenging reconstruction of intestinal continuity. The antecolic position of the Roux limb is associated with a decrease in the incidence of small-bowel obstruction and internal hernias. The best prevention of the formation of these hernias is probably by closure of potential mesenteric defects at the initial operation with a non-absorbable running suture. We present a patient in late pregnancy with a small-bowel volvulus following laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass for morbid obesity and discuss the available literature. For a favorable obstetric and neonatal outcome, it is crucial not to delay surgical exploration and an emergency operation usually is mandatory.
Obes Surg. 2009 Jul;19(7):944-50. Epub 2008 Oct 2. Small bowel obstruction and internal hernias during pregnancy after gastric bypass surgery. Torres-Villalobos GM, et al.   PMID: 18830790
Small bowel obstruction (SBO) is a recognized complication of Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) surgery. Internal hernia (IH) a potential problem associated with RYGB, can have severe consequences if not diagnosed. We present two cases of SBO due to IH during pregnancy after laparoscopic RYGB (LRYGB). Both patients underwent an antecolic, antegastric LRYGB...IH should always be ruled out in pregnant patients with previous RYGB and abdominal pain. Prompt surgical intervention is mandatory for a good outcome.
Taiwan J Obstet Gynecol. 2007 Sep;46(3):267-71. Strangulation of upper jejunum in subsequent pregnancy following gastric bypass surgery. Wang CB, et al.  PMID: 17962108
...CASE REPORT: After a Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery, a 32-year-old woman had unrelenting epigastria for one week at 36 weeks' gestation. An emergency cesarean delivery, followed by laparotomy, was performed. A female neonate was delivered with Apgar scores of 8 and 9 at 1 and 5 minutes, respectively. Strangulation and gangrene of the upper jejunum caused by a fibrous band at the site of the Roux anastomosis were revealed. Segmental resection of the nonviable bowel was performed. The patient experienced a smooth postoperative course. CONCLUSION: The awareness of internal hernias and small bowel strangulation should be addressed when unrelenting epigastric pain is present in women after Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery, during their first subsequent pregnancy.
Case Reports in Obstetrics and Gynecology. Volume 2011 (2011), Article ID 415795. doi:10.1155/2011/415795.  Abdominal Pain after Gastric Bypass: Labor, Uterine Rupture, or Obstruction and Internal Hernia. Cross, SN et al. PMID: 22567508 Full text available here.
...CASE: A 26-year-old G4P1112 status post-Roux-en-Y gastric bypass required multiple urgent antenatal evaluations due to frequent episodes of abdominal pain. At 35 + 4 weeks, she presented with severe abdominal pain; initial evaluation was negative for gastrointestinal pathology. The patient was found to be in preterm labor and underwent a repeat cesarean section. The postoperative course was complicated by bowel obstruction due to internal hernia resulting in an emergent laparotomy and a prolonged hospital course....
Obes Surg. 2006 Sep;16(9):1246-8. Internal hernia with Roux loop obstruction during pregnancy after gastric bypass surgery. Ahmed AR and O'Malley W.   PMID: 16989713
We report the rare case of a pregnant woman who had undergone Roux-en-Y gastric bypass 8 months previously, and now presented with subacute small bowel obstruction secondary to internal herniation of some of the proximal Roux limb into the lesser sac through the transverse mesocolon rent, which was widely spread apart. At laparoscopy, the hernia contents were reduced and the defect was repaired. The patient made a good recovery. Because of the changes associated with pregnancy, gastric bypass patients may be at an increased risk of internal herniation. It is particularly important not to delay surgical exploration, even in the absence of a positive finding on imaging, because delay may lead to potentially devastating bowel strangulation and sepsis culminating in loss of fetus and mother.
Hum Reprod Update. 2009 Mar-Apr;15(2):189-201. Epub 2009 Jan 8. Reproductive outcome after bariatric surgery: a critical review. Guelinckx I, Devlieger R, Vansant G.  PMID: 19136457
...METHODS: English-language articles were identified in a PUBMED search from 1982 to January 2008 using the keywords for pregnancy and bariatric surgery or gastric bypass or gastric banding. RESULTS: The few reported case-control and cohort studies clearly show improved fertility and a reduced risk in obstetrical complications, including gestational diabetes, macrosomia and hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, in women after operatively induced weight loss when compared with morbidly obesity women. The incidence of intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) appears to be increased, however. No conclusions can be drawn concerning the risk for preterm labour and miscarriage, although these risks are probably increased compared with controls matched for body mass index. Operative complications are not uncommon with bariatric surgery and several cases have pointed to the increased risk for intestinal hernias and nutritional deficiencies in subsequent pregnancy. Deficiencies in iron, vitamin A, vitamin B(12), vitamin K, folate and calcium can result in both maternal complications, such as severe anaemia, and fetal complications, such as congenital abnormalities, IUGR and failure to thrive. CONCLUSIONS: Close supervision before, during and after pregnancy following bariatric surgery and nutrient supplementation adapted to the patient's individual requirements can help to prevent nutrition-related complications and improve maternal and fetal health, in this high-risk obstetric population.
Incidence of Internal Hernias After GB

Obes Surg. 2003 Jun;13(3):350-4. Internal hernias after laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass: incidence, treatment and prevention. Higa KD, Ho T, Boone KB.   PMID: 12841892
BACKGROUND: Laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGBP) has been shown to be a safe and effective alternative to traditional "open" RYGBP. Although lack of postoperative adhesions is one advantage of minimally invasive surgery, this is also responsible for a higher incidence of internal hernias. These patients often present with intermittent abdominal pain or small bowel obstruction with completely normal contrast radiographs. METHODS: Data was obtained concurrently on 2,000 consecutive patients from February 1998 to October 2001 and analyzed retrospectively...RESULTS: 66 internal hernias occurred in 63 patients, an incidence of 3.1%...20% of patients had normal preoperative small bowel series and/or CT scans..There was 1 death associated with complications of the internal hernia. The negative exploration rate was 2%. CONCLUSION: Internal hernias are more common following laparoscopic RYGBP than "open" RYGBP. Contrast radiographs alone are unreliable in ruling out this diagnosis. Early intervention is crucial; most repairs can be performed laparoscopically. This diagnosis should be entertained in all patients with unexplained abdominal pain following laparoscopic RYGBP. Meticulous closure of all potential internal hernia sites is essential to limit this potentially lethal complication.
Obes Surg. 2006 Oct;16(10):1265-71. Internal hernia after laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass for morbid obesity. Iannelli A, Facchiano E, Gugenheim J.   PMID: 17059733
BACKGROUND: Laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (LRYGBP) is associated with a relatively high incidence of internal hernias (IH) when compared to the open operation. METHODS: A search in PubMed MEDLINE from January 1994 through January 2006 was performed (keywords: obesity, laparoscopy, gastric bypass and internal hernia). RESULTS: 26 studies with a total of 11,918 patients were considered. 300 cases of IH occurred (rate 2.51%)...Mortality was 1.17%. CONCLUSIONS: IH after LRYGBP has an incidence of 2.51%. Closure of mesenteric defects with non-absorbable running suture and antecolic Roux limb are recommended. Surgical exploration for suspicion of IH after LRYGBP should be first done by laparoscopy.
Obes Surg. 2011 Dec;21(12):1822-7. Small bowel obstruction after antecolic antegastric laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass without division of small bowel mesentery: a single-centre, 7-year review. Abasbassi M, et al.   PMID: 21656166
Reported incidence of small bowel obstruction (SBO) after laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass varies between 1.5% and 3.5%. It has been suggested that the antecolic antegastric laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (AA-LRYGB) is associated with a low incidence of internal herniation (IH). Therefore we routinely did not close mesenteric defects. The records of 652 consecutive patients undergoing primary AA-LRYGB from January 2003 to December 2009 in a single institution were retrospectively reviewed...Of the 652 patients, 63 (9.6%) developed SBO. The majority (6.9%, 45 patients) had a SBO due to IH...Twenty-nine out of 63 cases had negative computed tomography (CT) findings and IH was diagnosed on CT in only 33% (14/45) of patients with IH. All patients underwent diagnostic laparoscopy. No bowel resections had to be performed. In contrast to previous reports, a high incidence of SBO with a high rate of IH at the JJ site was found in our series. Accuracy of CT is low and diagnostic laparoscopy is mandatory when SBO is suspected. Since 2010 we have started closing the JJ site, and data on SBO are collected prospectively. We believe that closing of the mesenteric defects is a mandatory step, even in an AA-LRYGB.
Am J Surg. 2004 Dec;188(6):796-800. Internal hernias after laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass. Garza E Jr, et al.   PMID: 15619502
...METHODS: A retrospective review of 1,000 retrocolic Lap-RYGB was performed to identify those who developed postoperative internal hernias. Clinical symptoms, radiologic characteristics, and operative outcomes were analyzed to determine clinical and radiologic diagnostic accuracy (including computed tomography [CT] scan and upper gastrointestinal imaging). Subsequent independent review was performed to match operative intervention with radiologic imaging and interpretation. Operative outcomes, including the hernia closure technique, hospital length of stay, and mortality were obtained. RESULTS: Of 1,000 Lap-RYGB procedures, 45 internal hernias were identified (4.5%) in 43 patients...The most common clinical symptoms included intermittent, postprandial abdominal pain, and/or nausea vomiting (86%), although 20% had no abdominal tenderness. Initial radiologic imaging studies were diagnostic in 64%, although subsequent review of all imaging studies showed diagnostic abnormalities in 97%...The mean time to intervention for an internal hernia repair was 225 days (range 2 to 490), whereas hospital length of stay was 1.2 days (range 1 to 4). No deaths were noted. CONCLUSIONS: Internal hernias after retrocolic lap-RYGB are associated with vague abdominal complaints and limited radiologic imaging results. A high index of clinical suspicion should be used in this patient population, and surgeon review of radiology imaging studies should be performed. Prompt surgical intervention is successful and can commonly be performed laparoscopically.

Monday, June 4, 2012

Do You Know You're Overweight?

Another gem from My OB Said What?!?

I keep trying to swear off repeating these here on my blog, but they just make too many of my points for me to resist, plus it's just important to fully document incidents like this.  So here's another one:
“Oh my goodness! Do you know you’re overweight? Have you tried to diet and exercise??"
– OB immediately upon entering the room and meeting a mother for the first time. The mother was in the process of miscarrying a 16 week pregnancy
I'm not even going to start commenting on this one, it's so wrong on so many levels. Urgh.

Commenters, go for it.  What do you want to say to this doctor?

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Plea for Help in the U.K.


This comment was left on a recent post on this blog.  It is a plea for help from a pregnant women in the U.K.

I am only going to address one aspect of her concerns, the one I find most disturbing; I hope others will step up and address some of the rest of her concerns.
Please please please, can someone help me. I am 10 weeks pregnant and currently have a BMI of 35.  
Firstly, I have suffered with severe sickness since 5 weeks and doctor said it was ok as I 'could do with losing some weight' and refused to give me medications, and now I have had my first midwife appointment today and was told that more than 50 percent of maternal deaths in pregnancy and childbirth are obese mothers and that I will have to have special monitoring and won't be allowed to have a natural birth at the birth centre and will have to be under consultant care and be constantly monitored throughout labour (meaning no water birth, no moving around, no getting into positive positions to birth).  
I am so scared and disappointed, I feel like I am an unfit mother already and feel that the drs think I do not care about the health of my unborn baby. Now I know that this will not go down well with some people but I am considering a termination so that I can lose more weight before carrying a child (I have currently lost 70 pounds). 
I came across this blog and I am aware that you are based in the US and I am in the UK so some things are different...for instance I can't actually choose a provider and am stuck with who I have :(...but please, any advice would be so appreciated. Both myself and my partner are concerned and do not know what to do. 
There are so many things to cover here, it's hard to know where to start.  Please comfort and reassure this woman that she CAN do this.  She needs to hear from many people, not just me.  Please leave some encouraging comments at the end of this post.*

In the meantime, here is my response.  First, dear Reader, please don't terminate this pregnancy over these scare tactics or your fears.  Chances are that everything will be okay.  Many MANY women with a BMI well over 35 have had healthy pregnancies and babies.  My BMI is 48, far over yours, and I had 4 healthy pregnancies and babies, and am none the worse for wear for it. I know so many women your size and far larger who have had healthy happy babies.  You can read some of their birth stories here and here.

No, no one can promise you with 100% certainty that you and this baby will be fine, but the odds are certainly in your favor, "obese" or not. Most obese women have healthy babies; some do have complications like GD or high blood pressure, but even then, most of the time, these conditions are able to be treated and everyone is still fine.  So don't panic over the scare tactics they are giving you.

To be fair, the doctors and midwives are trying to do what they think is their job, to apprise you of possible risks associated with "obesity" and pregnancy, but the problem is that they have gone so far overboard in stating these that they are frightening women unduly, making them think that almost no women of size have healthy pregnancies or babies, when in fact, most do.

In some cases, care providers lay on the scare tactics so strongly that they bully women into weight loss surgery, risky diets, over-intervention, and even terminating the pregnancy.  That is NOT good health care, that's medical bullying. And for God's sake, this poor woman has already lost 70 lbs., but despite the fact that she followed typical medical advice to lower her BMI before pregnancy, she is still being punished and scared half to death.  Where is the justice in that?

Yes, there are some risks associated with pregnancy in obese women, but NO, the answer is not in scaring women into terminating an established pregnancy until they reach a "normal" BMI.

Shame on these providers for laying the scare tactics on so strongly that someone would even consider terminating a pregnancy simply because of their weight.

Yes, among those rare women who have died during pregnancy or birth, obese women are overrepresented somewhat.  That does NOT mean that 50% of obese women who are pregnant die during pregnancy─that's a misunderstanding of what the care providers were trying to say. Death is an extremely rare occurrence for childbearing women in the developed world, and although very high BMI women are somewhat overrepresented in that group, the actual numerical risk of it happening to any one obese woman is quite low.

And the reason why fat women do die during pregnancy or birth boils down to three main causes, some of which is preventable:
  • Complications from general anesthesia during a cesarean
  • Complications from hypertensive disorders (high blood pressure and resulting disorders) in pregnancy
  • Blood clots (usually in conjunction with cesareans)
So to lower the risk for these problems, consider the following:
  • Don't let them push you into a cesarean you don't need. If a cesarean is required at some point, make sure they are prepared to use an epidural or spinal block instead of general anesthesia. Have an anesthesia consult ahead of time to be sure they have the equipment needed on hand if it were needed
  • Make sure you are monitoring your blood pressure carefully (you can get a home BP monitor if your readings are questionable at all), make sure they use the correct-sized BP cuff so that that readings are accurate, and get regular exercise and have great nutrition to lower your risk for developing gestational diabetes or blood pressure issues 
  • Regular exercise also lowers the risk for a blood clot during pregnancy; for certain people, low-dose aspirin therapy (only under the supervision of a care provider) is sometimes advised. If you have a cesarean, discuss with your provider the use (and proper dosage) of blood thinners, and be sure to move your legs around and walk as early as you can tolerate after the surgery. There are also special wraps and cuffs that can help reduce your chances of a blood clot after a cesarean; make sure to request these if you have a cesarean, and note any increase in shortness-of-breath to your providers
If this woman were in the U.S., I'd tell her to change care providers ASAP because it's difficult to overcome a really deep-set provider bias about obesity in just a few months, and it often influences the care a high-BMI mother receives.  However, I'm not sure what your options are for alternatives in the U.K.

There are, of course, private midwives that you could hire from outside the NHS system, and it seems to me like this would be well worth the money to do if you can manage it.  I bet we could find a private midwife who would take you on as a client and who would work with you to find a way to make it financially feasible.  I know there have been women of size who have had great out-of-hospital births in the U.K. with private midwives.

But if that's absolutely not an option, then you will have to work within the system, and the way to do that is to push back against the care providers who are giving you a hard time.  I'm hoping some of my U.K. readers will pop in and leave some suggestions about how to do that.

At the very least, one of the best things you can do is to find a Pregnancy Buddy, an advocate familiar with size-friendly care practices, who will come with you to appointments and help you speak up for quality care and question fat-phobic practices.  A doula who really "gets" weight stigma and has a Health At Every Size approach could be a great help for you in advocating for more size-friendly care.

Best wishes to you, and I sincerely hope you will not let your fears (and the scare tactics of the providers) keep you from enjoying this pregnancy and this baby.  Be as healthy as you can in your habits without obsessing over them, find a Pregnancy Buddy or Size-Friendly Doula to help you speak up for yourself, and don't be afraid to push back against the bias of your providers and even report them to their superiors if necessary.

Pregnancy is one of the best times to learn how to advocate for yourself, your baby, and your needs (whatever size you are), and you deserve to have loving, respectful care, regardless of your BMI or whether you lose enough weight to fit into their narrow definition of "normal".  Start demanding that care now, and don't settle for second-best.  You and your baby deserve no less.


*Please keep your comments civil and kind and aimed towards helping this woman's specific situation or about commenting on weight-biased scare tactics, rather than about pushing a particular point of view on abortion. This is not a forum for abortion debates, and I will be vetting comments before I publish them.  Please stay kind and helpful in your words.  Thank you.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

A 50-75% Chance of "Needing" a Cesarean?

Another gem from My OB Said What?!?
“You Have A 50-75% Chance Of Needing A Cesarean Section Next Time…” 
“You have a 50-75% chance of needing a cesarean section next time, because you are short and overweight.” 
– Perinatologist to mother during preconception meeting...after the mother had already had a successful vaginal birth
This is how many doctors perceive us because of our size (both height and weight).  They simply conclude that there is virtually no way for us to birth a baby vaginally, never considering that their own biases around size and their common interventions with short/fat women (inducing early, having a low threshold for surgery) influences these outcomes.

The kicker here is that this woman has already had a vaginal birth, and despite difficult conditions too.  Once you've had a vaginal birth, your chances of having another is greatly increased....yet in his eyes, this doesn't really count at all if you are fat and short.

Older women get the same kind of grief.  And so do VBAC moms.  And it's all nonsense, frankly.

Yes, there is some research showing higher c-section rates in fat women, older women, short women, blah blah blah.  But RARELY do they consider whether it's really that "risk factor" or instead the way they manage the labors of these women and the fear they have around these risk factors that increases the cesarean rate more than the risk factor itself.

In obstetric research,the problem is always assumed to be with the woman.  Not the care provider's management or perceptions of risk, but somehow the fault of the woman herself (or her obesity, or her age, or her shortness, yadda yadda). I almost never see studies raise the question of provider perception or management at all.

It's time for care providers to recognize that their management of women is an integral part of high c-section rates in certain groups...not the only factor, but a much stronger factor than is generally acknowledged.

I have a dear online friend who is currently having a difficult time finding a provider who will support her for a VBAC.  This despite the fact that she has already had TWO VBACs.  It doesn't matter; they just see that she's fat and had a prior cesarean.

This is really pissing me off. Especially since I'm all of the above.  I'm short, "morbidly obese", old, and a VBAC mom.  Most doctors would look at me and tell me I had NO chance of having a vaginal birth because of these four risk factors....and yet I did.  Twice.

Risk factors are not absolute sentences. MOST women, even with risk factors, can birth just fine, if they can just get care providers to "let" them have an adequate chance at it.

It's long past time for care providers (and researchers) to recognize that the way providers manage and perceive women with risk factors has a lot to do with the outcomes associated with them.




Saturday, May 19, 2012

Birth Story Video: Jennifer's Waterbirth

Here is the birth story and wedding/birth video of a plus-sized mama I thought readers might enjoy.  It's not a short video (about 6 minutes) but it's well worth watching!

Below is the mother's story (which includes 4 previous miscarriages) and what she wants other women of size to know about pregnancy and birth.
My name is Jennifer. I live in southern Oregon and am a midwife apprentice. I have attended many births and have caught 4 babies under supervision. Of the many births I have attended, a good handful have been to plus-size mommas. 
Two off the top of my head were between 300-400 lbs. Both mommas had very healthy uneventful pregnancies and wonderful easy labors, and both mommas delivered in water at home. Water is great for plus-size mommas because it allows you to move more easily into different positions.  
I myself am a plus size momma. I am 5'6" and started my pregnancy at 232 lbs., about size 18. I finished my pregnancy at 276. I know doctors like to tell you to only gain 15 lbs. if you're "obese" but that's one of many reasons I didn't choose a doctor! I am a firm believer that as long as you gain your weight on healthy food then you gain what you need, and restricting food can cause issues in pregnancy. Nutrition is key in pregnancy, especially protein!   
I had a wonderful very healthy pregnancy with a midwife, and gave birth to a beautiful baby at home on Christmas eve.  A baby girl,  9 lbs. 12 ounces, 20.5 inches. 
Being plus size and pregnant is a challenge but I think it's because we set up obstacles in our minds. Will I look pregnant, how much weight will I gain, will I be able to handle the physical demands of labor, will I be bullied into tests and procedures because I'm overweight? 
Remember that you are a strong, intelligent, beautiful woman who can birth a healthy baby, regardless of your weight. If you aren't comfortable being your own advocate, then hire a doula! Get educated, know your options, and don't forget to celebrate this beautiful rite of passage!

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Fetal Over-testing in the Last Trimester Because of Fat?

This is a comment that was left on my blog recently, in the "Will I Feel My Baby Move If I'm Fat?" post. It's a new twist on the old wives' tale (more like old OB's tale) that fat women supposedly have too much abdominal fat to feel their babies move in pregnancy.
"I am 29 weeks today and a nurse practitioner I saw last week told me I have to have nonstress tests 2X week because of my weight. She claims I won't feel the baby's movements so they need to monitor them. Has anyone else been told this? I'm a very busy woman and incredibly stressed about having to go to the hospital 2X week, plus she says I have to do an ultrasound monthly, plus do my weekly doctors appts. Advice would be great because I don't want to do this but I feel I have to so the baby will be monitored appropriately."
Seriously?  A non-stress test 2x per week from 29 weeks on because a fat woman supposedly won't feel her baby's movements? 

This is pure and unadulterated bullsh*t.  Women of size feel their babies move perfectly well, thank you. There's no fat between the baby and the inside of the uterus; we feel every roll and punch and kick.

Nearly every woman of size I've ever spoken to has said that yes, they feel their babies move just fine; I certainly did. Yet this myth about fat "preventing" women from feeling their babies still persists. That it persists among the public is disappointing but attributable to ignorance; that it persists among some healthcare providers is nothing short of appalling.

But the second question here is whether fat women are so incredibly high-risk from "obesity" alone that we have to be monitored 2x/week from the middle of the second trimester on?  Yet other women only start monitoring around week 41? Oh puleeeze.

Even most diabetics aren't monitored this aggressively. Insulin-dependent diabetics usually start fetal surveillance around 32 weeks. For gestational diabetics not on insulin, the need for fetal surveillance is widely debated; if used at all, it is usually introduced around the end of pregnancy.  Only diabetics with severe comorbid complications like vascular issues or kidney disease usually benefit from this kind of aggressive monitoring starting in the late second trimester. Are the providers in the above scenario seriously comparing the risk of an uncomplicated pregnancy in an obese woman to that of a brittle type 1 insulin-dependent diabetic with pre-existing kidney damage?

The only time I can see this kind of over-the-top monitoring being truly needed in a woman of size would be in someone who has experienced serious major poor outcomes in a previous pregnancy, or who is experiencing major complications in a current pregnancy (HELLP syndrome, hypertensive disorders, prior stillbirth, brittle or uncontrolled diabetes, diabetes with comorbidities, IUGR, or various other serious complications). The commenter didn't mention any such comorbidities.

Now, the argument some docs make for increased fetal surveillance in "obese" women is that some studies have shown an increase in the risk for stillbirth in these women.  However, not all studies have shown an increase in the risk of stillbirth in obese women. Moreover, there is no data to prove that aggressive monitoring in obese women lowers the risk for stillbirth.  

It is questionable whether obesity itself, without concurrent complications like HELLP or uncontrolled diabetes, necessitates this kind of frequent monitoring.  It is telling that most care providers do not require it. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) does not currently recommend increased antepartum surveillance in the last trimester for obese women.  Nor does the Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists of Canada (SOGC).  And research suggests that obese women don't have more poor results on non-stress tests.

Although there may be a somewhat higher risk for stillbirth in women of size, and although non-stress tests and biophysical profiles can sometimes help identify babies at high risk for stillbirth, these tests don't always help and come with downsides too. The rate of  false-positives is quite high, and often results in unnecessary interventions like early induction of labor or cesareans, and these also carry risks.

So while I can understand some providers wanting to offer this as an option to women of size (especially those who experience comorbid complications like hypertension disorders or restricted growth), I strongly question the value of its routine use in women of size with uncomplicated pregnancies. Furthermore, the testing schedule this woman has been put on is quite excessive (barring some complication we are not aware of).

Awareness of the possibility of complications in women of size is one thing, but clinicians must remember that over-testing brings its own risks and often becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.

I've been through four pregnancies as a "morbidly obese" woman and I was never required to do this kind of monitoring. Nor do I know many other fat women who have been required to do this extreme amount of monitoring. And I can assure you that I most definitely felt my baby well enough to do kick counts by the end of pregnancy.  The idea that non-stress tests or biophysical profiles are required because fat women are too fat to adequately keep track of their baby's movements is ludicrous.

Commenter, unless you have some major complication we don't know about, you might want to think about running far and fast from this practice so you can find one that doesn't see you as such a ticking time bomb.  Pick a practice that knows that fetal surveillance testing has both pros and cons, that knows there is a high risk of false positives and over-intervention with these tests, and that is willing to discuss these pros and cons with you and let you make the final decision on their use instead of compelling you to follow an arbitrary schedule of testing virtually designed to find problems and intervene.

*How about you?  If you are a woman of size, have you been required to have such aggressive fetal surveillance from so early on?  What kind of fetal testing was recommended for you as a woman of size by your providers?

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Supersized Women and Cesareans: A Tale of Two Cities

Although most care providers mean well when caring for high-BMI women, one consistent blind spot has been providers recognizing how the  high level of interventions used with many high-BMI women influence outcome.

In other words, are poor outcomes only due to "obesity" or do some poor outcomes reflect the interventive way that obese women are often managed in pregnancy and birth?

This is a particularly relevant question for the high cesarean rates found in "morbidly obese" women (BMI of 40 or more).  If a high-BMI woman is perceived as ultra high-risk, and is therefore subjected to increased rates of interventions (like inductions, early epidurals, and a lower threshold for surgery), does the resulting high cesarean rate really reflect problems with obesity itself, or with the way obese women are managed?

Here are two studies of cesarean rates in women of size that demonstrate that iatrogenic (provider-caused) influences can have a very strong effect on cesarean rates, and that a high cesarean rate in morbidly obese women is NOT just about the obesity itself.

These two studies examined cesarean rates in "super obese" women (BMI of 50 or more), one from Kentucky and one from the U.K.  The Kentucky study found a super-high c-section rate, and the U.K. study did not.

Yet the two studies basically were looking at very similar study groups, women with a BMI of 50 or more. If cesarean rates really are tightly tied to obesity and obesity alone, shouldn't the cesarean rates in these two studies be similar?

In the Kentucky study, women with a BMI over 50 had a whopping 56% cesarean rate. Compare that with the British study that found a 30% cesarean rate in women with a BMI over 50.

The Kentucky cesarean rate was nearly DOUBLE the rate of the British group, even though the size of the women was similar. 

This strongly suggests that management of labor around the pregnancies of supersized women differed and highly influenced the resulting cesarean rate, and that it's NOT just about a woman's size, but also her care provider's management.

We can't tell for sure from these particular studies why the cesarean rates in women of size in these two places are so different, but it's a good bet that it's NOT because the uteri of British women are that much more efficient than those of Kentucky women. No, the contrast in rates is much more likely to be due to differences in care, attitudes, and interventions.

A couple of strong possibilities spring to mind.

First, midwives are the most prevalent form of care provider for most women in the U.K., whereas most women in the USA get their care from OBs.  Research shows that on the whole, midwives tend to have lower cesarean rates, even when the risk profiles of patients are similar.  So perhaps the cesarean rate is lower because more of the "super obese" women in the U.K. had access to midwifery care.  If so, this is yet another reason to be alarmed about the move towards restricting fat women's access to lower-tech birthing alternatives and midwifery care.

Second, we don't know that much about the types of intervention, induction rates, and threshold for surgical intervention in each study.  My guess is that the Kentucky study had very high induction rates (which tends to lead to higher cesarean rates), a higher rate of interventions, and a lower threshold for doing a cesarean in labor.

I would love to see more research that focuses on why there can be such different outcomes in "morbidly obese" women.  We need to really shine a spotlight on differing management protocols and how they impact cesarean rates ─ and particularly so in women of size.

Interestingly, the Kentucky study notes that pitocin augmentation in labor led to lower cesarean rates in these women, although this difference did not rise to statistical significance.  They speculated, therefore, that "a qualitative or quantitative deficiency in the hormonal regulation of labor exists in the morbidly obese parturient."

This is a theory that is often bandied about in obstetric research (without any supporting proof, but often accepted as gospel anyhow). Yet if this were true, why were 70% of British women able to birth vaginally? It's far too easy and convenient to blame fat women's hormones instead of looking more closely at your own management practices instead.

It's time for doctors to stop scapegoating obesity alone for high cesarean rates in women of size, and long past time for them to start examining more closely how their own biases and high-intervention protocols negatively influence outcomes in this group.

This is not an emotionally comfortable thing to study, because care providers are human and no one wants to acknowledge that their own biases and management can affect outcome so strongly.  I understand that.

But if care providers are truly interested in improving outcomes in "obese" women, then this is the kind of work that MUST be done.  

The contrast between these studies shows that most very fat women CAN give birth vaginally....if caregivers would just stand aside and let them. It's time to take off the blinders and see how management protocols can  influence that.



References

Am J Perinatol.  2011 Jun 9. [Epub ahead of print] Extreme Morbid Obesity and Labor Outcome in Nulliparous Women at Term.  Garabedian MJ, Williams CM, Pearce CF, Lain KY, Hansen WF.  PMID: 21660900

Source: Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky.
We examined the prevalence of cesarean delivery (CD) among women with morbid obesity and extreme morbid obesity. Using Kentucky birth certificate data, a cross-sectional analysis of nulliparous singleton gestations at term was performed. We examined the prevalence of CD by body mass index (BMI; in kg/m (2)) using the National Institutes of Health/World Health Organization schema and a modified schema that separates extreme morbid obesity (BMI ≥50) from morbid obesity (BMI ≥40 to less than 50). Bivariate and multivariate analyses were performed. Multivariate modeling controlled for maternal age, estimated gestational age, birth weight, diabetes, and hypertensive disorders. Overall, 83,278 deliveries were analyzed.

CD was most common among women with a prepregnancy BMI ≥50 (56.1%, 95% confidence interval 50.9 to 61.4%). Extreme morbid obesity was most strongly associated with CD (adjusted odds ratio 4.99, 95% confidence interval 4.00 to 6.22).

Labor augmentation decreased the likelihood of CD among women with extreme morbid obesity, but this failed to reach statistical significance. We speculate a qualitative or quantitative deficiency in the hormonal regulation of labor exists in the morbidly obese parturient. More research is needed to better understand the influence of morbid obesity on labor.
BJOG. 2011 Mar;118(4):480-7. Planned vaginal delivery or planned caesarean delivery in women with extreme obesity. Homer CS, Kurinczuk JJ, Spark P, Brocklehurst P, Knight M.  PMID: 21244616

Source: National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit, University of Oxford, UK.
OBJECTIVE: To compare the outcomes of planned vaginal versus planned caesarean delivery in a cohort of extremely obese women (body mass index ≥ 50 kg/m(2)). 
DESIGN: A national cohort study using the UK Obstetric Surveillance System (UKOSS). 
SETTING: All hospitals with consultant-led maternity units in the UK. 
POPULATION: Five hundred and ninety-one extremely obese women delivering in the UK between September 2007 and August 2008. 
METHODS: Prospective cohort identification through UKOSS routine monthly mailings. 
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Anaesthetic, postnatal and neonatal complication rates. 
RESULTS: After adjustment, there were no significant differences in anaesthetic, postnatal or neonatal complications between women with planned vaginal delivery and planned caesarean delivery, with the exception of shoulder dystocia (3% versus 0%, P = 0.019). There were no significant differences in any outcomes in the subgroup of women who had no identified medical or antenatal complications. 
CONCLUSIONS: This study does not provide evidence to support a routine policy of caesarean delivery for extremely obese women on the basis of concern about higher rates of delivery complications, but does support a policy of individualised decision-making on the mode of delivery based on a thorough assessment of potential risk factors for poor delivery outcomes.



Monday, April 23, 2012

First Cesareans and Risk for Fetal Death in Subsequent Pregnancies

International Cesarean Awareness
Network, www.ican-online.org
 
This recent study shows yet another reason to avoid cesareans whenever possible.

Remember that the absolute risk of this complication for any one mother is quite low, but the fact that the risk is increased at all is a good reason to be cautious about the overuse of cesareans on a population-wide basis.

If you would like to read a more complete summary of this study (and others like it which examined the same question), please read Henci Goer's analysis of the study over at Science & Sensibility.


J Midwifery Womens Health. 2012 Jan;57(1):12-7. doi: 10.1111/j.1542-2011.2011.00142.x. First birth cesarean and risk of antepartum fetal death in a subsequent pregnancy. Osborne C, Ecker JL, Gauvreau K, Lieberman E.  PMID: 22251907
Introduction: To examine the relationship between first birth by cesarean and antepartum fetal death in a subsequent pregnancy in a large, hospital-based population.  
Methods : Data for this retrospective cohort study were taken from a database of all women who gave birth at Brigham and Women's Hospital during 4 waves of data collection beginning in 1994 and ending in 2002. We calculated the risk of antepartum fetal death in the subsequent pregnancy for women whose first birth was by cesarean compared to women with a vaginal first birth. Survival analysis was used to examine the influence of gestational age at birth.  
Results: Of 10,996 women who met inclusion criteria, 22% (n = 2450) had first births by cesarean, and 78% (n = 8546) had vaginal first births. The risk of antepartum fetal death in the subsequent pregnancy for women whose first birth was by cesarean was significantly greater than the risk for women whose first birth was vaginal (odds ratio 2.6; 95% confidence interval, 1.1-6.2). The relationship between first birth cesarean and antepartum fetal death in a subsequent pregnancy differed by gestational age at birth, with no excess risk among women with a previous cesarean birth who gave birth before 34 weeks' gestation but with a substantially increased risk for women who gave birth at 34 or more weeks' gestation (unadjusted hazard ratio = 5.6; 95% confidence interval, 1.6-19.8). Hazard ratio estimates for the association remained significant in bivariate models when adjusted for maternal height, weight, age, hypertension, and diabetes.  
Discussion: In these data, first birth by cesarean was associated with an increased risk of antepartum fetal death in a subsequent pregnancy. Our findings suggest that antepartum fetal deaths in subsequent pregnancies might be prevented by avoiding primary cesarean birth.

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Maternal Obesity and Autism: Science Sensationalism Run Amok


As everyone and their mothers have heard by now, a new study just out is promoting the idea that maternal "obesity" is associated with an increased risk for the development of autism in children.

So now even the increase in autism over the years is fat people's fault too, eh?  Well, I beg to differ.  There are a lot of problems with the study, its conclusions, and how it is being promoted in the media.  Quelle surprise.

Science Sensationalism

This is yet another case of Science By Press Release, and frankly, it's appalling.  It's yet another way the medical establishment tries to shame fat women out of procreating unless they lose weight first.

Yes, there are risks associated with obesity and pregnancy and it's important to be aware of them, but it's another thing entirely to bludgeon women with them in a way that shames or scares them inappropriately, or paints the choice of a fat women to have a baby as utterly irresponsible.

If you take a look at the study and the way it's been reported, you will find that there are a number of problems.  Let's discuss a few of these.

Jumping to Conclusions 

Frankly, the public promotion of this finding was very inappropriate because this is the first time scientists have found a relationship between obesity and autism.

One of the prime rules for researchers is that study findings must be corroborated by other studies before being accepted as a true relationship.  If this is the first time they have found this relationship, it should have been confirmed by other studies before being publicized.

Since I'm not an expert in the autism field, I did a little digging around to see if other studies have examined the question. One major review of autism literature found that researchers have largely not investigated the topic before. They noted that there was one study which did not find an association between obesity and autism, but that they could not include this study in their review because its findings had not been replicated.

So the study that exonerates obesity doesn't get any press, but the one that finds a connection gets a huge media tour of the world?  The one that didn't find an association doesn't even get listed with a reference, only rates a passing mention in a major review, simply because it hasn't been replicated....but the one that does find an association is somehow worthy of huge press attention, even though it hasn't been replicated either?  Double standard much?

Although this new finding is interesting on a purely scientific basis, it is not yet something that should be promoted in the media, where people will jump to conclusions about a relationship before it is really proven.  Yet that is precisely what has happened, and you can bet it's going to be on every future Scare Provider Risk List for obesity and pregnancy, despite its unconfirmed nature.  It's just one more weapon with which to bludgeon women of size around their childbearing choices.

An Alternative Agenda?

That the authors publicized this finding so strongly now, before it has been corroborated elsewhere, suggests another agenda.  Either the authors are trying to promote their careers by making a splash with this in the media, or the authors are strongly pushing a public health weight loss agenda.  Or perhaps it could be a little bit of both?

What an amazing coincidence that the lead author is a doctoral candidate at U.C. Davis, isn't it?  A little publicity for a widely-received research finding goes a long way to grease the thesis process, and maybe even the job-finding prospects afterwards, eh?

Judging by some of the press release comments along the lines of, "Well, we can't say for sure obesity causes autism, but this is just another reason to 'get healthy' before pregnancy," they are hitting the weight loss agenda hard when publicizing the study:
Since more than one-third of U.S. women of child-bearing age are obese, the results are potentially worrisome and add yet another incentive for maintaining a normal weight, said researcher Paula Krakowiak, a study co-author and scientist at the University of California at Davis.
The implication is that if you dare to not achieve that "normal" weight before pregnancy, you are irresponsible and a burden to society with your "damaged" babies.

These days, so much of "science" is all about the public health spin you put on findings.

A Less-Than-Overwhelming Association

Another concern is that the finding was not even that strong.  If the study had found a huge relationship between obesity and autism, that might have been grounds for publicity even on a first finding of such a correlation, but it really didn't find that strong a relationship.

The study found that children of obese women had an odds ratio of 1.67 for being on the autism spectrum.  In the press releases, this is phrased as "67% higher risk of autism than the children of normal-weight moms."  While this cannot be dismissed, it is hardly a really striking finding. If there's really a strong relationship, you want to see a much more dramatic risk increase than that.  This "relationship" is fairly tepid at best.  It can't be overlooked at this point, but it's certainly not so strong that it really deserved the publicity hype it got.

And if there was really a strong relationship between metabolic conditions in pregnancy and developmental disorders, you would expect that both diabetes and hypertension would come back as risk factors.  Indeed, they did, but the confidence interval for these findings crossed 1.0, meaning that those findings could be due simply to coincidence.  The confidence interval for the obesity or "any metabolic condition" did not quite cross 1.0, but the fact that both the diabetes and hypertension findings did raises the question of whether this relationship will really hold up in further studies.

And that's the bottom line, isn't it?  This finding needs to be replicated in other studies.  Promoting it so widely and so overwhelmingly on the basis of such tepid findings is embarrassingly premature.

Causality versus Correlation

As others have pointed out, just because two things happen at the same time doesn't mean they are causally related to each other.  Yet many of the press releases trumpet a "parallel rise" in both obesity and autism in recent years, implying causality, although they always insert a token sentence or two that no conclusions can be reached yet:
Although nobody can say the nation's rising obesity rate is to blame for the prevalence of autism, Krakowiak said the parallel increases did catch her attention.
Way to imply causality without actually stating outright that the two are related.

Other "experts" go even further:
Dr. Daniel Coury, chief of developmental and behavioral pediatrics at Nationwide Children's Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, said the results “raise quite a concern.” He noted that U.S. autism rates have increased along with obesity rates and said the research suggests that those figures may be more than a coincidence.
So let's look at this claim a little further.  Several press releases point out that "autism is up 78% since 2002."   And the final sentence of the study abstract states, "With obesity rising steadily, these results appear to raise serious public health concerns."

Except that recent data has NOT shown obesity to be rising steadily.  It did for a while, and then it leveled off...around the year 2000.  Yet autism seems to be rising steadily, with no leveling off of cases, as you might expect if obesity and autism were causally linked.

This doesn't mean we can disprove a link between autism and obesity, just that citing a parallel increase in both obesity and autism doesn't hold up logically, since obesity has leveled off and is not currently increasing.

Again, the authors seem to be most interested in promoting the obesity hysteridemic, rather than looking at actual data in an objective fashion.  They've bought into the party line that obesity is increasing at exponential rates and shows no sign of slowing, and they show no willingness to question this meme, nor does the press.

This is sensationalism, not science.

Disorder or Difference?

Another concern for me in the press coverage was the rampant ableism that goes unquestioned in the articles.

Is autism really a "disorder" or is it merely a difference?  Is it something that needs to be "fixed", or is it simply a representation of neurological biodiversity?

Do we really need to treat folks on the autism spectrum like a freak show?  Or is this just another Public Health Boogeyman to scare people with?

Possible "Causes" of Autism

This study is just the latest in a series of studies promoting a new and trendy "cause" for the Autism Boogeyman.

If you look back over the last several decades, the media is full of these reports.  And every few years, something new is blamed (including air pollution, vaccines, MSG, GMOs, pesticides, lead exposure, low vitamin D, and many others).  The Autism Blame Game is a common media theme.

After all these reports over the years, blaming yet another possible cause for autism, you'd think that the media would be more cynical and wary of yet another new claim.  But each new "cause" is embraced and promoted as THE answer.  Obesity is just the latest one, but one that will no doubt stick around a long time because it fits the anti-obesity scare mantra that doctors and the media want to promote.

Mother-Blaming 101

A few decades ago, it was the mother's "frigid" behavior that was blamed for autism, the appalling "Refrigerator Mother" theory.  Researchers noticed a difference in interaction between mothers and their children with autism, and blamed "cold" mothers for the development of autism.  But what happened was that the mothers were responding to the cues of the child, as mothers do.  If hugging or touching your child distresses him greatly, then it is only natural for the mother to decrease that behavior in the best interests of her child.  It is an act of love, a response that recognizes and acknowledges the needs of the child over her own.  Yet researchers in a notoriously mother-blaming era interpreted it in an entirely different way.

Sadly, such mother-blaming behavior is still happening, only now it is being focused on what mothers do "wrong" in pregnancy.

Given their world view that autism is a disorder, it is understandable the researchers are anxious to figure out its causes, but researchers need to be very careful not to simply indulge in a new and more insidious type of mother-blaming.

Other Physical Causes

Clearly, the most important factor involved in autism is genetics.  Twin studies and family history studies have shown that autism is highly heritable, and that genetics is far more important than environmental influences.  However, studies on identical twins suggest that sometimes environmental influences are also a factor.  In all likelihood, autism is mostly genetic, but may also involve complex interactions between genetics and environmental factors.  If it does, the question is which environmental factors?

Many different factors have been tied to autism in research.  The ones that seem to have the most credible research behind them include prematurity, older age of parents (especially the father), jaundice after birth, low birth-weight/small-for-gestational-age (LBW/SGA), being the first-born child, bleeding during pregnancy, breech malpositions, maternal use of medication during pregnancy, the mother having been born abroad, gestational diabetes, maternal infection, etc.

However, it's one thing to find a possible association in a data dredge study, and another thing for that factor to be supported in study after study after study. Often something is found to be a factor in one study but not another. It is only when multiple studies consistently find common risk factors that public health actions should be taken.  Anything more is premature and ill-considered.

Another problem is that the studies looking at risk factors for autism are subject to considerable methodological variation, with different diagnostic criteria, comparison groups, sample sizes, and methods of assessing autism.  Therefore, it is important to be cautious about over-interpreting the results of any one study.  It is the big picture that is the most important one.

One meta-analysis acknowledged the weaknesses of most autism studies, saying:
Few factors have been examined in multiple well-conducted studies. Therefore, attempted replication in methodologically strong studies remains necessary. Although the majority of factors examined in multiple studies have given inconsistent results, the preponderance of findings overall have not been statistically significant.
Some research suggests that perhaps it takes multiple "insults" to increase the risk for autism.  This includes problems during the pregnancy, problems during the birth, problems in early childhood, and missed developmental markers.  This is an interesting theory; it may be that looking for the "magic bullet" is the wrong approach, but rather it is the interaction of several factors (together with a strong genetic predisposition) that is important.

Whatever the answer is, it is clear that many things have been blamed for autism over the years, but that any findings must be interpreted with great caution.  

But What If There Is A True Relationship?

Of course, we can't just dismiss the findings of this study totally.  The authors did find a relationship, and we can't just dismiss every study with a conclusion we don't like.  So let's take a moment to discuss the possibilities.

IF there's a real relationship (which is by no means proven at this point), where do researchers need to go from here to investigate this topic more thoroughly?

Refine the Research

First, the researchers need to stop using obesity as a surrogate for a metabolic abnormality.  That assumption is problematic since many obese people do not have diabetes, insulin resistance, or hypertension, and many thin people do.  Making obesity an automatic surrogate for metabolic aberration is far too simplistic and leads to overgeneralization of risk.

The picture is likely much more complex and needs to be treated as such.  Separate out the obese people with metabolic issues from those without, then compare them to "normal" weight people with and without metabolic issues too. Try and tease out where the true risk factors lie rather than draw broad generalizations.

Second, do follow-up research. If children of obese mothers do turn out to be at increased risk, then why do most obese women not have children with autism?

Compare the pregnancies of fat women whose children developed autism to the pregnancies of fat women whose children did not develop autism.  Did those who developed autism have more medical complications in pregnancy?  More prematurity?  More SGA babies?  More gestational diabetes?  Evidence of fetal hypoxia at birth?  More exposure to pitocin?  More cesareans?  More epidurals?  More iron-deficiency or other nutritional deficits?  More inadequate weight gain?

In other words, look deeper than just obesity.  Stop being so simplistic, refine the research further, and ask more meaningful questions.

Track Real-Life Incidence Numbers

It's always frustrating when obesity researchers use odds ratios to talk about various risks associated with obesity and pregnancy, which tends to inflate the sense of risk around a complication.  Fortunately, the authors of this study at least try to place the risk in some numerical context.  One press release noted:
On average, women face a 1 in 88 chance of having a child with autism; the results suggest that obesity during pregnancy would increase that to a 1 in 53 chance, the authors said.
1 in 53 would mean that nearly 2% of all babies born to fat women would be autistic.  Notice that they don't document that 2% of all children of fat women are autistic, they just extrapolate and estimate the risk. Frankly, it seems high to me; I don't think that 2% of all the children of fat women I have met are autistic. But we need real data in order to know this for sure, not just extrapolation of risk.

Future research needs to do some long-term follow-up of the children of obese women to see how many really are autistic, and how this compares to the rest of the population.  If the rate is not 2%, something is wrong with the theory or their estimation of risk.

Discern How Obesity Could Be a Cause

In this study, the authors speculate why fetal exposure to a metabolic disorder might result in adverse fetal development.  They point out that poorly regulated maternal glucose (even in those not technically diabetic) leads to fetal hyperinsulinemia, which can lead to chronic hypoxia (low oxygen levels) in the fetus.  This can also lead to fetal iron deficiency.  They note:
Both fetal hypoxia and iron deficiency can profoundly affect neurodevelopment in humans, including alterations in myelination and cortical connectivity and aberrations in hippocampal neurons. Fetal iron deficiency has also been associated with reduced recognition memory as well as behavioral and developmental problems. 
They also note that high levels of proinflammatory cytokines (common in diabetes and obesity) have been shown to disrupt normal brain development in animal studies.

All these theories are very interesting, but again, they are only speculation.  You can't prove causation with speculation.  Yet you know that this study is going to be used by many doctors NOW as yet another scare tactic to pressure women into losing weight before pregnancy so they can control those glucose levels and cytokines...just in case.

If a number of studies corroborates a relationship between obesity and autism, then researchers must do more than speculate about possible cause for this; they must examine it much more carefully before advising radical interventions like stringent diets or weight loss surgery.  You have to know what the cause is before you can know what your cure should be, or you may inadvertently do more harm than good.

Consider Confounding and Iatrogenic Factors 

Most importantly, if maternal obesity really seems to be associated with autism, then it's very important that researchers control for confounding factors, especially iatrogenic ones.  In fact, obesity could simply be a surrogate marker for highly interventionist care.

For example, women of size are often placed on restricted diets or told to gain little weight (or even to lose it) during pregnancy, and we know this increases the risk for low birth-weight or SGA babies.  We also know that in a number of studies, LBW/SGA babies are associated with an increased risk for autism.  Are the autistic children largely limited to obese mothers with low birth-weigth/SGA babies?  Or are they spread out more evenly?

In addition, women of size are rarely "allowed" to labor normally and naturally these days, with very high induction of labor rates in morbidly obese women in particular.  Some research suggests that exposure to artificial pitocin during labor increases the risk for autism.  No one is sure why this might be, but they speculate it could be that exogenous pitocin interferes with the natural oxytocin (love/bonding hormone) produced by babies.  If there is a pitocin/autism connection, is the issue really the women's obesity or the increased amount of interventions used in their pregnancies by most doctors?

Ultrasounds are another question.  Women of size are often required to get multiple ultrasounds during a pregnancy, and their ultrasounds may take longer to get an adequate image.  Some experts tie ultrasounds to autism, although frankly, the evidence is very thin for this. But a supposed obesity/autism connection must also rule out increased exposure to ultrasounds as a potential "cause."

Cesareans are another intervention which has been tied to autism by some researchers.  And heaven knows, morbidly obese women are subjected to a very high rate of cesareans at many institutions in this country (although many of these are probably not necessary).  So again, could obesity be merely a surrogate for a pattern of obstetric over-intervention?

Sadly, NONE of these possibilities were even raised by the obesity/autism study just published.  A metabolic cause was just assumed, and the possibility of confounding factors completely ignored.  However, any future research into this topic MUST account for the possibility.

Final Thoughts

This study has many issues.  It makes obesity a sweeping surrogate for metabolic aberrations, jumps to strong conclusions on the basis of fairly tepid data, fails to control for possible confounding factors, treats the issue far too simplistically, and tries to link a rise in autism with a rise in obesity, despite evidence that obesity is not increasing in parallel with autism.

Furthermore, this study should never have been trumpeted to the press like this.  It is only the first study to find such an association, which is hardly compelling evidence.  Such an association must be found in a number of studies before any serious conclusions can be made about a connection, and definitely before any major press releases are done or any radical "solutions" are proposed.

It's time for more (and better!) research on the topic, with consistent study designs between research so results can be compared more accurately. And it's time for a less mother-blaming slant to the research and publicity around it.  

The language of the press releases around this study was also problematic.  In the many press releases associated with this study, some of the interviewed doctors tried to soften the implied criticisms of obese mothers, pointing out that there was no proof (yet) that obesity causes autism and that there may be other factors at work. But just as clearly, the authors and others are using this to once again press for a weight loss agenda:
While the new research points to an association between mom's health during pregnancy and autism, it's important to note that "we can't really draw causal links," says researcher Paula Krakowiak. She is a PhD candidate in epidemiology at the University of California, Davis.
But "it is already known that any of these conditions have downstream risks in terms of pregnancy complications and delivery complications. The take-home message would be that any modifiable changes that one can make in their lifestyle or diet can benefit these conditions and potentially benefit the baby."
In another press release, commenters tell obese women not to feel guilty if they have an autistic child, while in the next breath they warn these women they may not live to see their child grow up:
While maternal obesity is linked to a modest increase in autism risk, Hyman said it can have other health consequences in mother and child. Previous studies have linked maternal obesity to birth defects, including spina bifida as well as heart and limb deformities. "Obesity is a major public health problem," she said. "The risk for autism and developmental disorders is only part of it."....
"We would not advocate treating the hypothetical causes of autism, but we would recommend women of childbearing years to eat healthy and exercise and take care of themselves, not only for the fetus but so they can see their children grow up."  
See their children grow up?  Even if obesity impacts lifespan, it is quite unlikely to cause mothers to die before their children grow up, and such language is pure emotionally-laden scare tactics.

Clearly, there is a strong dose of weight bias in these reports, not to mention the usual scare tactics and mother-blaming.  Too bad the media wasn't more neutral in their reporting of this study.

If mother-blaming has been raised to the level of a sport in our society, then fat-mother blaming has been raised to the level of an Olympic sport.  

This new study and its attendant publicity is just the latest volley in this vicious sport.


References

The study in question: Pediatrics. 2012 May;129(5). DOI: 10.1542/peds.2011-258. Maternal Metabolic Conditions and Risk for Autism and Other Neurodevelopmental Disorders. Krakowiak P et al. PMID:  22492772. Full text available online at: http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/early/2012/04/04/peds.2011-2583.full.pdf 

Genetics and Autism

Psychol Med. 1995 Jan;25(1):63-77. Autism as a strongly genetic disorder: evidence from a British twin study. Bailey A, et al.  PMID: 7792363
Two previous epidemiological studies of autistic twins suggested that autism was predominantly genetically determined, although the findings with regard to a broader phenotype of cognitive, and possibly social, abnormalities were contradictory. Obstetric and perinatal hazards were also invoked as environmentally determined aetiological factors. The first British twin sample has been re-examined and a second total population sample of autistic twins recruited. In the combined sample 60% of monozygotic (MZ) pairs were concordant for autism versus no dizygotic (DZ) pairs; 92% of MZ pairs were concordant for a broader spectrum of related cognitive or social abnormalities versus 10% of DZ pairs. The findings indicate that autismis under a high degree of genetic control and suggest the involvement of multiple genetic loci. Obstetric hazards usually appear to be consequences of genetically influenced abnormal development, rather than independent aetiological factors. Few new cases had possible medical aetiologies, refuting claims that recognized disorders are common aetiological influences.
Epidemiol Rev 2002; 24: 137–53. Heritable and noninheritable risk factors for autism spectrum disorders. Newschaffer CJ, Fallin D, Lee NL. Full free text at: http://epirev.oxfordjournals.org/content/24/2/137.long 

Other Studies on Autism Risk Factors  


(*Abstracts have been edited for space reasons. Positive association are highlighted in bold, negative associations in italics)

Pediatrics. 2011 Aug;128(2):344-55. Epub 2011 Jul 11. Perinatal and neonatal risk factors for autism: a comprehensive meta-analysis. Gardener H, Spiegelman D, Buka SL. PMID: 21746727
OBJECTIVE: To provide the first review and meta-analysis of the association between perinatal and neonatal factors and autism risk...RESULTS: Over 60 perinatal and neonatal factors were examined. Factors associated with autism risk in the meta-analysis were abnormal presentation, umbilical-cord complications, fetal distress, birth injury or trauma, multiple birth, maternal hemorrhage, summer birth, low birth weight, small for gestational age, congenital malformation, low 5-minute Apgar score, feeding difficulties, meconium aspiration, neonatal anemia, ABO or Rh incompatibility, and hyperbilirubinemia. Factors not associated with autism risk included anesthesia, assisted vaginal delivery, postterm birth, high birth weight, and head circumference. CONCLUSIONS: There is insufficient evidence to implicate any 1 perinatal or neonatal factor in autism etiology, although there is some evidence to suggest that exposure to a broad class of conditions reflecting general compromises to perinatal and neonatal health may increase the risk. Methodological variations were likely sources of heterogeneity of risk factor effects across studies.
Epidemiology. 2002 Jul;13(4):417-23. Perinatal risk factors for infantile autism. Hultman CM, Sparén P, Cnattingius S. PMID: 12094096
...METHODS: We conducted a case-control study nested within a population-based cohort (all Swedish children born in 1974-1993). We used prospectively recorded data from the Swedish Birth Register, which were individually linked to the Swedish Inpatient Register. Cases were 408 children (321 boys and 87 girls) discharged with a main diagnosis of infantile autism from any hospital in Sweden before 10 years of age in the period 1987-1994, plus 2,040 matched controls...RESULTS: The risk of autism was associated with daily smoking in early pregnancy (OR = 1.4; CI = 1.1-1.8), maternal birth outside Europe and North America (OR = 3.0; CI = 1.7-5.2), cesarean delivery (OR = 1.6; CI = 1.1-2.3), being small for gestational age (SGA; OR = 2.1; CI = 1.1-3.9), a 5-minute Apgar score below 7 (OR = 3.2, CI = 1.2-8.2), and congenital malformations (OR = 1.8, CI = 1.1-3.1). No association was found between autism and head circumference, maternal diabetes, being a twin, or season of birth. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that intrauterine and neonatal factors related to deviant intrauterine growth or fetal distress are important in the pathogenesis of autism.
Acta Psychiatr Scand. 2006 Oct;114(4):257-64. Perinatal risk factors and infantile autism. Maimburg RD, Vaeth M.   PMID: 16968363 
...RESULTS: The risk of infantile autism was increased for mothers aged >35 years, with foreign citizenship, and mothers who used medicine during pregnancy. A higher risk of infantile autism was seen among children with low birth weight and with congenital malformations. Birth interventions, pathological cardiotocography, green amnion fluid and acidosis during delivery were not associated with increased risk for infantile autism. CONCLUSION: Our findings suggest that suboptimal birth conditions are not an independent risk factor for infantile autism. A high prevalence of lowbirth weight and birth defects among autism cases seems to explain the suboptimal birth outcome.
Dev Neurobiol. 2012 Apr 5. doi: 10.1002/dneu.22024. Epidemiologic studies of exposure to prenatal infection and risk of schizophrenia and autism. Brown AS.   PMID: 22488761 
In this review, we provide a synopsis of work on the epidemiologic evidence for prenatal infection in the etiology of schizophrenia and autism...Some evidence also suggests that maternal infection and immune dysfunction may be associated with autism. Although replication is required, these findings suggest that public health interventions targeting infectious exposures have the potential for preventing cases of schizophrenia and autism.....
J Autism Dev Disord. 2010 Nov;40(11):1311-21. Prenatal and perinatal risk factors for autism in China. Zhang X, et al.   PMID: 20358271
We conducted a case-control study using 190 Han children with and without autism to investigate prenatal and perinatal risk factors for autism in China....In the adjusted analysis, nine risk factors showed significant association with autism: maternal second-hand smoke exposure, maternal chronic or acute medical conditions unrelated to pregnancy, maternal unhappy emotional state, gestational complications, edema, abnormal gestational age (<35 or >42 weeks), nuchal cord, gravidity >1, and advanced paternal age at delivery (>30 year-old).
Psychol Med. 2012 May;42(5):1091-102. Epub 2011 Dec 2. Lower birth weight indicates higher risk of autistic traits in discordant twin pairs. Losh M, et al.   PMID: 22132806
...METHOD: We studied a population-based sample of 3715 same-sex twin pairs participating in the Child and Adolescent Twin Study of Sweden (CATSS)...RESULTS: Twins lower in birth weight in ASD-discordant twin pairs (n=34) were more than three times more likely to meet criteria for ASD than heavier twins [odds ratio (OR) 3.25]. Analyses of birth weight as a continuous risk factor showed a 13% reduction in risk of ASD for every 100 g increase in birth weight (n=78)...CONCLUSIONS: The data were consistent with the hypothesis that low birth weight confers risk to ASD. Thus, although genetic effects are of major importance, a non-genetic influence associated with birth weight may contribute to the development of ASD.
Front Integr Neurosci. 2009;3:31. Epub 2009 Nov 11. Incidence of pre-, peri-, and post-natal birth and developmental problems of children with sensory processing disorder and children with autism spectrum disorder. May-Benson TA, Koomar JA, Teasdale A. PMID: 19936320
...An exploratory descriptive study, utilizing retrospective chart review, was conducted to investigate the incidence of pre-, peri- and post-natal, birth and developmental problems in a sample of 1000 children with SPD and of 467 children with autism spectrum disorder(ASD), who also had SPD. This study revealed that although no one factor was strongly associated with SPD or ASD, an average of seven events for children with SPD and eight events for children with ASD occurred across categories. These included: one pre-natal/pregnancy problem, delivery complication, assisted delivery, gestational or birth-related injury/illness; one or more early childhood illnesses or injuries; two or more infancy/early childhood developmental problems; and one or more delayed early childhood developmental milestones. When comparing results to national studies of the typical population, most remarkable was the incidence of jaundice, three to four times higher in both the SPD and ASD groups than in typical children. In addition, rates of breech position, cord wrap/ prolapse, assisted delivery methods (particularly forceps and suction deliveries), and high birth-weight were greater in both groups. Incidence of premature birth was higher in the ASD although not significantly different from the SPD group. Also of note was a high frequency of absent or brief crawling phase, and high percentages of problems with ear infections, allergies, and maternal stresses during pregnancy.
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2004 Jun;61(6):618-27. Perinatal factors and the development of autism: a population study. Glasson EJ, et al.   PMID: 15184241
...DESIGN: Subjects born in Western Australia between 1980 and 1995 and diagnosed with an autism spectrum disorder by 1999 were included as cases (n = 465). Siblings of the cases (n = 481) and a random population-based control group (n = 1313) were compared with the cases on obstetric information contained in the Maternal and Child Health Research Database of Western Australia. RESULTS: Compared with control subjects, cases had significantly older parents and were more likely to be firstborn. Case mothers had greater frequencies of threatened abortion, epidural caudal anesthesia use, labor induction, and a labor duration of less than 1 hour. Cases were more likely to have experienced fetal distress, been delivered by an elective or emergency cesarean section, and had an Apgar score of less than 6 at 1 minute. Cases with a diagnosis of autism had more complications than those with pervasive developmental disorder not otherwise specified or Asperger syndrome. Nonaffected siblings of cases were more similar to cases than control subjects in their profile of complications. CONCLUSIONS: Autism is unlikely to be caused by a single obstetric factor. The increased prevalence of obstetric complications among autism cases is most likely due to the underlying genetic factors or an interaction of these factors with the environment.
Med Hypotheses. 2004;63(3):456-60. Could oxytocin administration during labor contribute to autism and related behavioral disorders?--A look at the literature. Wahl RU.  PMID: 15288368
This literature review summarizes recent potential evidence, most of which is at the molecular/mechanistic level, in support of Hollander's hypothesis that excess oxytocin (OT), possibly through OT administration at birth, could contribute to the development of autistic spectrum disorders and related syndromes by proposed down regulation of the OT receptor (OTR). In this review, recent molecular evidence for OTR internalization by excess OT is related to OT's reported effects on animal social behavior, favoring social bondage, notably in sheep, voles, rats and especially mice. Adding indications for OT's capability of crossing the maternal placenta and OT's possibility of crossing an underdeveloped or stressed infantile blood brain barrier at birth, a causal connection between OT excess and behavioral disorders such as autism can be supported from a molecular perspective. Possible strategies such as a thorough statistical analysis of numerous birth records as well as molecular studies such as radiotracing using labeled OT are proposed to test this hypothesis.
J Autism Dev Disord. 2003 Apr;33(2):205-8. Brief report: pitocin induction in autistic and nonautistic individuals. Gale S, Ozonoff S, Lainhart J.  PMID: 12757361  (note the very small study sample)
Oxytocin plays an important role in social-affiliative behaviors. It has been proposed that exposure to high levels of exogenous oxytocin at birth, via pitocin induction of delivery, might increase susceptibility to autism by causing a downregulation of oxytocin receptors in the developing brain. This study examined the rates of labor induction using pitocin in children with autism and matched controls with either typical development or mental retardation. Birth histories of 41 boys meeting the criteria for autistic disorder were compared to 25 age- and IQ-matched boys without autism (15 typically developing and 10 with mental retardation). There were no differences in pitocin induction rates as a function of either diagnostic group (autism vs. control) or IQ level (average vs. subaverage range), failing to support an association between exogenous exposure to oxytocin and neurodevelopmental abnormalities.
B J Psych 2009;195:7-14.  Prenatal risk factors for autism: comprehensive meta-analysis.  Gardener H, Spiegelman D, Buka SL.  Full text available at: http://bjp.rcpsych.org/content/195/1/7.long
...AIMS: To provide the first quantitative review and meta-analysis of the association between maternal pregnancy complications and pregnancy-related factors and risk of autism. METHOD: PubMed, Embase and PsycINFO databases were searched for epidemiological studies that examined the association between pregnancy-related factors and autism. Forty studies were eligible for inclusion in the meta-analysis. Summary effect estimates were calculated for factors examined in multiple studies. RESULTS: Over 50 prenatal factors have been examined. The factors associated with autism risk in the meta-analysis were advanced parental age at birth, maternal prenatal medication use, bleeding, gestational diabetes, being first born v.third or later, and having a mother born abroad. The factors with the strongest evidence against a role in autism risk included previous fetal loss and maternal hypertension, proteinuria, pre-eclampsia and swelling. CONCLUSIONS: There is insufficient evidence to implicate any one prenatal factor in autism aetiology, although there is some evidence to suggest that exposure to pregnancy complications may increase the risk.
Am J Epidemiol. 2005 May 15;161(10):916-25; discussion 926-8. Risk factors for autism: perinatal factors, parental psychiatric history, and socioeconomic status. Larsson HJ, et al.  PMID: 15870155
...The study was nested within a cohort of all children born in Denmark after 1972 and at risk of being diagnosed with autism until December 1999. Prospectively recorded data were obtained from nationwide registries in Denmark. Cases totaled 698 children with a diagnosis of autism; each case was individually matched by gender, birth year, and age to 25 controls. ...Adjusted analyses showed that the risk of autism was associated with breech presentation (risk ratio (RR) = 1.63, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.18, 2.26), low Apgar score at 5 minutes (RR = 1.89, 95% CI: 1.10, 3.27), gestational age at birth <35 weeks (RR = 2.45, 95% CI: 1.55, 3.86), and parental psychiatric history (schizophrenia-like psychosis: RR = 3.44, 95% CI: 1.48, 7.95; affective disorder: RR = 2.91, 95% CI: 1.65, 5.14). Analyses showed no statistically significant association between risk of autism and weight for gestational age, parity, number of antenatal visits, parental age, or socioeconomic status. Results suggest that prenatal environmental factors and parental psychopathology are associated with the risk of autism. These factors seem to act independently.