0000000000614510

AUTHOR

F. Parazzini

showing 2 related works from this author

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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Exposure to video display terminals and risk of small-for-gestational-age birth

2010

In this study, the authors analyzed the association between video display terminal (VDT) use before and during the three trimesters of pregnancy and risk of small-for-gestational-age (SGA) birth in a case-control study. The cases for this study were 555 women who delivered SGA births. The controls were 1966 women who gave birth at term to healthy infants of normal weight. In terms of the length of exposure, the odds ratios (OR) of SGA birth were 1.2 for less than one hour and 1.3 for between two and 20 hours per week. For higher usage (more than 20 hours per week), the OR was 1.2 (95% CI: [Confidence Interval] 0.9-1.7). The authors conclude that this study does not show any association betw…

RiskAdultMaleRisk FactorsConfidence IntervalsOdds RatioHumansVideo Display Terminals; RiskComputer Terminalcohort analysis; health risk; pregnancyhealth riskRisk FactorInfant NewbornEnvironmental Exposurecohort analysisSettore MED/40 - Ginecologia E OstetriciaComputer TerminalsMaternal ExposureCase-Control StudiesPrenatal Exposure Delayed EffectsInfant Small for Gestational AgeFemalepregnancyCase-Control StudieConfidence IntervalHumanVideo Display Terminals
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