CLINICAL AND LABORATORY CHANGES IN POST-TERM INFANTS
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Web of Journals Publishing
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Due to the lack of consensus on what kind of pregnancy should be considered post-term, there are very conflicting data in the literature on the frequency of post-term pregnancy. However, according to most authors, the frequency of postmaturity ranges from 1.4 to 14%, averaging 10% [1, 8]. A description of post-term pregnancy is already found in ancient treatises dating back to the era of Hippocrates and Galen. The beginning of a scientific approach to this problem dates back to 1902, when Ballantyne and then Runge (1948) first described signs of overmaturity in a newborn, and this syndrome was called Bellentyne-Runge syndrome. Despite such a solid history, many issues regarding this pathology have not yet been resolved [2, 10].