Extrauterine Placental Transfusion
Cross-source consensus on Extrauterine Placental Transfusion from 1 sources and 4 claims.
1 sources · 4 claims
How it works
Benefits
Preparation
Highlighted claims
- Extrauterine placental transfusion keeps the newborn and placenta connected after caesarean birth while they are moved together for assessment and stabilisation. — Heart rate trends in healthy newborns ≥35+0 weeks’ gestation after caesarean delivery with extrauterine placental transfusion and physiology-based cord clamping: a Norwegian observational study (INTACT-3)
- In the protocol, the placenta was usually delivered without cord clamping after about 60-90 seconds. — Heart rate trends in healthy newborns ≥35+0 weeks’ gestation after caesarean delivery with extrauterine placental transfusion and physiology-based cord clamping: a Norwegian observational study (INTACT-3)
- The findings suggest that EPT and PBCC may help maintain preload and support cardiovascular stability during newborn transition after caesarean delivery. — Heart rate trends in healthy newborns ≥35+0 weeks’ gestation after caesarean delivery with extrauterine placental transfusion and physiology-based cord clamping: a Norwegian observational study (INTACT-3)
- The study suggests sustained placental circulation through EPT and PBCC may support a more stable early heart rate after caesarean delivery. — Heart rate trends in healthy newborns ≥35+0 weeks’ gestation after caesarean delivery with extrauterine placental transfusion and physiology-based cord clamping: a Norwegian observational study (INTACT-3)