0000000000614424

AUTHOR

E. Pinter

showing 2 related works from this author

Abstract of the 68th Meeting (Spring Meeting) 6–9 March 1990, Heidelberg

1990

0303 health sciencesPhysiologyChemistryClinical BiochemistryTibialis AnteriorHuman physiology030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyPharmacologySpring (mathematics)ArticleAtrial Natriuretic Peptide03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineAtrial natriuretic peptidePhysiology (medical)Spreading DepressionCapsaicinExtensor Digitorum Longus030304 developmental biologyPflugers Archiv
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Body Mass Index and Weight Gain in Pregnant Women With HIV: A National Study in Italy.

2013

Although most of the women (69.4%) had a normal BMI at start of pregnancy, only 37% had an adequate weight gain during pregnancy. Inadequate body weight gain was more common (44.8%) than excessive weight gain (18.2%), but 40% of overweight women and 50% of obese women had an excessive weight gain in pregnancy, with about 9% of the women in these categories gaining >18 kg during pregnancy (Table 1). Only 1.9% of the women had a vaginal delivery; elective and nonelective cesarean deliveries accounted for 81.3% and 16.7% of deliveries, respectively. Compared to underweight/normal women, overweight/obese women had similar occurrences of preterm delivery (23.4% vs 22.7%, P = .871), significantly…

Microbiology (medical)medicine.medical_specialtyantiretroviral therapyMEDLINEHuman immunodeficiency virus (HIV)HIV Infectionsbody mass indexmedicine.disease_causeSettore MED/17 - MALATTIE INFETTIVEBody Mass IndexBMIBody Mass Index; weight gain; HIV-1; PregnancyPregnancyMedicineHumansHIV infection; pregnancy; body mass indexPregnancy Complications InfectiousPregnancybusiness.industryObstetricsCesarean SectionInfectiousPregnancy OutcomeHIVweight gainmedicine.diseaseHIV infectionPregnancy ComplicationsInfectious DiseasesItalyNational studyHIV-1Femalepregnancymedicine.symptombusinessWeight gainBody mass index
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