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https://hdl.handle.net/11055/804
Title: | Increasing body mass index and abdominal subcutaneous fat thickness are associated with increased skin-to-epidural space distance in pregnant women | Authors: | Eley, Victoria Chin, Adrian Sekar, Renuka Donovan, Timothy Krepska, Amy Lawrence, Mitchell Bell, Sheridan Ralfem, Kate McGrath, Shaun Webb, Lachlan Robinson, Alexander van Zundert, Andre Marquart, Louise |
Keywords: | Body Mass Index Subcutaneous Fat, Abdominal Cesarean Section Epidural Space Obesity Parturition Pregnancy Analgesia, Epidural Epidural |
Abstract: | BACKGROUND: Body mass index does not indicate the distribution of adipose tissue. Central adiposity may be measured using ultrasound measurement of subcutaneous fat thickness. This study determined if the abdominal subcutaneous fat thickness measured correlated with skin-to-epidural space distance at delivery, and compared this with the booking body mass index. METHODS: We analysed a sub-set of participants from a single-centre, prospective cohort study that assessed the relationship between subcutaneous fat thickness and maternity outcomes. Abdominal subcutaneous fat thickness measurements were obtained during the routine fetal anomaly scan. The skin-to-epidural space distance was obtained in those having epidural or combined spinal-epidural analgesia. Linear regression was used to test for strength of association and adjusted R2 values calculated to determine if subcutaneous fat thickness or body mass index was more strongly associated with skin-to-epidural space distance. RESULTS: The 463 women had a median (IQR) booking body mass index of 25.0 kg/m2 (21.8-29.3) and subcutaneous fat thickness of 16.2 mm (13.0-21.0). The median (IQR) skin-to-epidural space distance was 5.0 cm (4.5-6.0). Both parameters significantly correlated with skin-to-epidural space distance (r=0.53 and 0.68 respectively, P <0.001. Adjusted linear regression coefficient (95% CI) for subcutaneous fat thickness was 0.09 (0.08-0.11), R2=0.30 and for body mass index 0.12 (0.11-0.13), R2=0.47. CONCLUSIONS: Booking body mass index had a stronger relationship with skin-to-epidural space distance at delivery than subcutaneous fat thickness, explaining 47% of the variation in the skin-to-epidural distance. | URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/11055/804 |
Appears in Collections: | Scholarly and Clinical |
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