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1.
Asian Spine Journal ; : 290-300, 2022.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-925579

ABSTRACT

Literature regarding pregnant women who sustained traumatic spinal injury during pregnancy is limited. Existing papers are mainly case reports, and this indicates a need for more high-quality research evidence in this area. Therefore, this study was designed to systematically review available literature that reported demographic information, clinical characteristics, and obstetric outcomes of women who sustained spinal injury during pregnancy. Studies published from the earliest record to January 2019, which reported traumatic spinal injury during pregnancy, were included. Studies that have reported pregnancy in patients with pre-existing spinal injury, review articles, commentaries, letter to editors, conference papers, and studies published in languages other than English were excluded. Sixteen studies reporting on 26 women were included. Their mean age was 26.7±5.5 years. Motor vehicle accidents were the main cause of spinal injury (n=15, 58%). Of the cases, four women sustained spinal injury during the 1st trimester of pregnancy, of which one had a spontaneous abortion, one delivered a baby with arthrogryposis multiplex congenital disorder, and the third one delivered a premature baby who died shortly after the delivery. Fifteen women sustained injury during their 2nd trimester, of which 14 delivered normal babies, while six sustained spinal injury during the 3rd trimester. Of these women, five delivered normal babies at term. Outcomes of pregnancy appear significantly affected if a spinal injury occurs during the 1st trimester of pregnancy; however, injuries sustained during the 2nd and 3rd trimesters can have good obstetric outcomes.

2.
Pakistan Journal of Physiology. 2017; 13 (3): 18-21
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-197573

ABSTRACT

Background: Students are generally prone to weight related problems due to sedentary lifestyle and disordered eating habits. The objective of current study was to evaluate the body mass index among MBBS and Physiotherapy students of Peshawar and to see its association with gender and academic year


Methods: This was a cross-sectional study conducted among MBBS and Physiotherapy students in Peshawar, from Sep 2016 to Sep 2017. A self-administered questionnaire was distributed among 250 students of different institutes, 213 filled questionnaires were returned. Body mass index [BMI] was used to classify underweight, overweight, and obesity grade I and grade II. Data was analyzed using SPSS-20


Results: Mean age of participants was 21.77+/-1.45. Females were 137 [64.3%] while males were 76 [35.7%]. Unmarried participants were 192 [90.1%], while 21[9.9%] were married. Mean height, weight and BMI of the participants were 1.654 meter, 61.1 Kg, and 22.8 respectively. One hundred and thirty [61.0%] were MBBS, and 83 [39.0%] were Physiotherapy students. Out of 213 respondents, 109 [51.2%] had normal BMI, 21[9.9%] were underweight, 41 [19.2%] were overweight, 31 [14.6%] were grade I obese and 11 [5.2%] were grade II obese. Majority of 1[st] year [68.0%] and 4[th] year [72.7%] students had normal BMI. BMI was not associated with gender or academic year [p>0.05]. Mean BMI in MBBS students was higher than the physiotherapy students [23.3 vs 22.1 Kg/M[2], p=0.03]


Conclusion: The prevalence of obesity appears higher in our students

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