Objective: To determine whether intrapartum magnesium sulfate (MgSO4) therapy for seizure prophylaxis in pre-eclampsia-eclampsia is associated with biochemical evidence of subacute fetal myocardial damage at delivery.
Study design: Troponin I, a cardiac-specific protein used to detect myocardial injury, was measured from the umbilical vein at delivery in term pregnancies complicated by pre-eclampsia and uncomplicated control pregnancies. Women with pre-eclampsia received intravenous MgSO4 as a 6-g load followed by 2 g/hour until delivery. Clinical characteristics and fetal troponin levels were compared between groups.
Results: There was no difference in troponin I concentrations between term patients with intrapartum MgSO4 therapy and controls who did not receive MgSO4 (median 0.86 ng/ml, range 0.72-1.10 vs. 0.89 ng/ml, range 0.68-1.50; p = 1.0). There was also no statistically significant difference in the number of patients with a troponin I level of > or = 1.0 ng/ml between groups (30.8% (4/13) vs. 15.4% (4/26); p = 0.4).
Conclusions: Our findings suggest that, in term fetuses that are not growth impaired, exposure to intrapartum MgSO4 is not associated with subacute myocardial injury.