AN
ARTICLE HOSTED BY IMPREGNORIUM.NET
SEX LATE IN PREGNANCY
DOES NOT TRIGGER LABOR
FRIDAY, July 7 (HealthDay News)
-- Having sex late in pregnancy does not help trigger labor and delivery,
experts report.
In fact, a new study has found just the opposite: Women who were sexually
active in the final three weeks of their pregnancies stayed pregnant
slightly longer, delivering at an average of 39.9 weeks gestation vs.
39.3 weeks for women who did not have sex during that time.
"Sexual activity didn't have an effect," confirmed Dr. Jonathan
Schaffir, author of a paper appearing in the June issue of Obstetrics
and Gynecology and assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology
at Ohio State University in Columbus.
But for other experts, the findings were mainly seen as irrelevant.
"I don't think they answered the question. I'm not sure we need
an answer to that question," said Dr. Victor Hugo Gonzalez-Quintero,
director of Maternal Fetal Medicine at the University of Miami Miller
School of Medicine. "What patients need to know is that sexual
activity is acceptable in most of the typical patients, all the way
to term."
Of all the old wives' tales involving pregnancy, this one may be the
most appealing, Schaffir said.
"People look for all kinds of things to shorten the whole pregnancy
process," he said.
One recent survey found that 73.6 percent of pregnant women knew about
this theory, and that 46.1 percent believed it.
There is some biological plausibility to the notion, Schaffir said.
"Semen contains prostaglandin, which is a hormone that is in commercially
prepared medications that we use to induce labor," he explained.
"So, there is a thought that maybe sex is doing the same thing
as commercial preparations. Also, maternal orgasm is associated with
contractions," he added.
But to see if this notion had any basis in fact, Schaffir enrolled 93
women from his practice in a study.
All women had low-risk, single pregnancies and were at their 37th week
of pregnancy or beyond at the time the study was conducted between July
2004 and July 2005.
"Over the course of routinely scheduled prenatal visits at the
end of pregnancy, when they start coming every week, I asked them if
they had had sex in the week prior and how many times," Schaffir
said. "I was also doing cervical exams, which is generally a routine
part of prenatal treatment."
Slightly more than half -- 50.5 percent -- of the women said they had
had sex during the final weeks of their pregnancy. That's a higher percentage
than was seen in prior studies, Schaffir noted.
However, the study found no correlation between frequency of sexual
intercourse and cervical changes. There was also no appreciable difference
in delivery dates between the two groups.
Women who had had sex delivered four days later, on average, than those
who did not engage in intercourse, the study found. But that's not a
significant difference, according to Schaffir.
The study is not the final word on the issue, the Ohio doctor said.
But Schaffir added that it's difficult, if not impossible, to conduct
a randomized trial on this subject.
The study did have one piece of reassuring news: The researchers found
no differences in fetal outcomes between women who had sex close to
delivery and women who did not.
"This suggests that, in
a low-risk population, having sex at the end of pregnancy is safe and
very commonly performed," Schaffir said.
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