At a glance
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Investigation on the Effects of Delayed Cord Clamping on Maternal and Neonatal Outcomes: Part I. Association Between Blood Volume, the Interval From Delivery to Cord Clamping, and Number of Umbilical Cord Milking
In Brief
A clinical study evaluating cord blood spontaneous drainage and Umbilical cord miking for Pregnancy Related and 2 related conditions. Completed, enrolled 80 participants across 1 site.
Detailed Summary
Delayed umbilical cord clamping (DCC), usually 1-3 minutes, is reported to be beneficial for term and preterm infants. Nevertheless, there are reasons that urge us to reevaluate the effect of DCC. First, most prior studies were conducted on American and European women. The benefits of DCC in the infants born to Asian women is not clear. Second, neonates born to Asian mothers usually have lower birth weights and placental weights compared to the neonates and placentas of American and European women. The optimal duration of DCC in Asian women remains undetermined. The objective of this study is to determine the association between the blood volume collected and the interval from delivery to cord clamping and number of umbilical cord milking in women with normal term pregnancies with vaginal delivery or elective cesarean delivery (CS). Results form this study will help us determine the optimal duration of DCC or numbers of cord milking in our population in the following studies.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
In women allocated to groups of cord blood spontaneous drainage, two clamps will placed at 4 finger breadths from the infant's abdomen and cut between two clamps after delivery of the baby. The clamp on the placental site will be removed and the drainage time and amount of cord blood to a measuring glass will be recored.
In women allocated to groups of cord milking group, two clamps will placed at 4 finger breadths from the newborn's abdomen and cut between two clamps immediately after delivery of the baby. The clamp on the placental site will be removed, then the umbilical cord will be squeezed several times, 5 seconds between each squeezing, to collect cord blood in a measuring glass. The number of cord milking and the volume of blood collected will be recorded.