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Can i buy xenical over the counter in australia ? thank you Pregnancy is a special time for any couple, but the new mother with a preeclampsia is particularly vulnerable—and potentially deadly. In a study conducted by Brigham Young University, researchers looked at 2,722 patients who were either pregnant with children or planning to be. Of the 2,722 women, 1,948 had preeclampsia—a life-threatening condition in which the placenta does not completely empty itself into the body—but there were also 3,074 healthy patients. These women either did not need assistance during labor or delivered vaginally with no help. All the women who had preeclampsia, researchers found, delivered their babies via vaginal delivery or C-section. The difference was clear: Patients with preeclampsia who delivered help delivery were significantly more likely to need a C-section than were those who did not. In addition, researchers Zithromax order overnight found that preeclampsia patients who delivered with cesarean section were more likely to go into labor spontaneously by themselves or in conjunction with another person. The findings aren't first to show that women with preeclampsia are at an increased risk of needing a C-section. In 2013, Dutch study from the University Medical Center in Maastricht looked at nearly 18,000 women who were pregnant with at-risk pregnancies and reported a strong association between preeclampsia and C-section. In that study, researchers found 16 percent of those who delivered early--that is, before 39 weeks gestation--needed a C-section, compared with 20.7 percent of those who delivered later. However, there was no difference in the rate of C-section between those patients who'd also had gestational diabetes and those who hadn't. (That study was limited to those at-risk pregnancies and wasn't able to determine how common preeclampsia was in the non-pregette population.) Of all the risks associated with pregnancy and delivery, some might seem small, but the risk of dying during delivery from complications with the placenta (which are caused by preeclampsia) may be the most frightening and potentially deadly. In a 2010 analysis of three previously published studies, University of Maryland researchers found that premature labor and the placenta together cause premature, severe hemorrhagic disease in 30 to 50 percent of cases. Another 2014 study 29 percent of all births showed the same result: risk of a serious neonatal hemorrhage among babies born to women who developed preeclampsia was more than 30 percent. Most of these maternal hemorrhages took place before the end of third trimester. In 2013, another study found that premature births from preeclampsia killed between 22 and 32 babies per day in 2006 and 2007. That same year, another study found that more than 11,000 infants died between 2005 and 2009 among women with preeclampsia who had delivery by na