BRAIN DEATH IN PREGNANCY: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW

Authors

  • Robinder Dhillon Mitra Sejati General Hospital, Medan, Indonesia
  • Ahsan Auliya Pertamedika Baiturrahim General Hospital, Jambi, Indonesia
  • Ririn Azhari H Bakri Sungai Penuh General Hospital, Jambi, Indonesia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.61841/y8k5ve44

Keywords:

Brain death, pregnancy, delivery, gestational age, perinatal

Abstract

Background: Brain death is a rare event in pregnancy. A recent case series estimated the prevalence of pregnancy among brain dead patients at 2.5. The care of a brain-dead pregnant women focuses on optimizing maternal recovery, considering fetal health impacts, and interventions for maternal support, including medication, radiation exposure, and preterm labor risks.

The aim: This study aims to investigate brain death in pregnancy.

Methods: By comparing itself to the standards set by the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) 2020, this study was able to show that it met all of the requirements. So, the experts were able to make sure that the study was as up-to-date as it was possible to be. For this search approach, publications that came out between 2013 and 2023 were taken into account. Several different online reference sources, like Pubmed and ScienceDirect, were used to do this. It was decided not to take into account review pieces, works that had already been published, or works that were only half done.

Results: In the PubMed database, the results of our search brought up 17 articles, whereas the results of our search on ScienceDirect brought up 11 articles. The results of the search conducted by title screening yielded a total 12 articles for PubMed and 6 articles for ScienceDirect. We compiled a total of 12 papers, 7 of which came from PubMed and 5 of which came from ScienceDirect. We excluded 2 review articles, 3 duplicate articles, 1 article having ineligible subject, and 1 discussion article. In the end, we included five research that met the criteria.

Conclusion: In this review, 80 of neonates were born alive. Somatic support of the brain-dead pregnant woman was perfomed to maximize perinatal outcomes. And during gestation, obstetricians must closely monitored fetal development.

References

Staff L, Nash M. Brain death during pregnancy and prolonged corporeal support of the body A critical discussion. Women and Birth.

Seifi A, Lacci JV, Godoy DA. Incidence of brain death in the United States. Clin Neurol Neurosurg.

Spears W, Mian A, Greer D. Brain death: a clinical overview.

Smok D, Prager KM. The ethics of neurologically complicated pregnancies. In: Handbook of Clinical Neurology.

Warren A, Kelly S, Karu McElvogue A, Burnstein R. Brain death in early pregnancy: A legal and ethical challenge coming to your intensive care unit J Intensive Care Soc.

Gal R, Zimova I, Antoni H, Minarcikova P, Ventruba P, Hruban L, et al. Delivery of a healthy baby from a brain-dead woman after 117 days of somatic support: A case report. American Journal of Case Reports.

Kinoshita Y, Kamohara H, Kotera A, Sagishima K, Tashiro T, Niimori D. Healthy baby delivered vaginally from a brain dead mother. Acute Medicine & Surgery.

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Published

2023-12-13

How to Cite

Dhillon, R. ., Auliya, A., & Azhari, R. . (2023). BRAIN DEATH IN PREGNANCY: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW. Journal of Advanced Research in Medical and Health Science (ISSN 2208-2425), 9(12), 39-45. https://doi.org/10.61841/y8k5ve44