Perinea Trauma during Childbirth: Socio Demographical Aspect and Management at Obstetrical Gynecology Department Donka National Hospital (Guinea-Conakry)

HTML  XML Download Download as PDF (Size: 224KB)  PP. 1486-1491  
DOI: 10.4236/ojog.2019.911144    328 Downloads   880 Views  

ABSTRACT

Perineal trauma is a non-surgical solution of continuity of posterior perineal committing under the effect of a violent exertion during childbirth. It occurs at the time of disengagement, either from the head or the posterior shoulder. Objectives: To calculate the perinea trauma during childbirth, describe the socio demographic profile of the women in childbed, identify contributory effects and appreciate the maternal prognostic. Methodology: It was a prospective study, descriptive type of 6 months (from May 19 to November 20, 2014). It took place at the maternity ward of Donka National Hospital. It concerned all received parturient, women in bed of a single fetus in the unit and having had a perineum traumatism. The real ones were epidemiologic, therapeutic clinical and prognostic. Results: We have recorded 110 perinea traumatism cases over 3496 childbirth let say a frequency of 3%. The socio demographic profile of the woman who did perinea traumatism was a teenager (42.7%), professional occupation (29.1%), married (88.2%), schooled, secondary and Technical level (42.7%), primary (70%) having had more than 3 prenatal consultations (73.6%). Contributory effects were: prim parity, young age, instrumental extraction by obstetrical forceps and the fetal weight between 2500 to 3999 g. Surgical management was (100%). The following were simple in 88.2% cases versus 11. 8% of complications. Conclusion: The reduction of this frequency requests systematical practice and corrects recentered prenatal consultations and the respect of episiotomy indications.

Share and Cite:

Baldé, O. , Diallo, M. , Sylla, I. , Mamy, M. , Barry, A. , Baldé, I. , Diallo, A. , Baldé, M. and Keita, N. (2019) Perinea Trauma during Childbirth: Socio Demographical Aspect and Management at Obstetrical Gynecology Department Donka National Hospital (Guinea-Conakry). Open Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 9, 1486-1491. doi: 10.4236/ojog.2019.911144.

Copyright © 2024 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.