Chasey Omere
University of Texas Medical Branch
8 Papers
7 Citations
Chasey Omere is an academic researcher from University of Texas Medical Branch. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pregnancy & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 5 publications.
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Papers
Interleukin (IL)-6: A Friend or Foe of Pregnancy and Parturition? Evidence From Functional Studies in Fetal Membrane Cells.
Chasey Omere,Lauren Richardson,George R. Saade,Elizabeth A. Bonney,Talar Kechichian,Ramkumar Menon +5 more
TL;DR: Although IL-6 is a good biomarker for adverse pregnancies, it is not an indicator of an underlying pathological mechanism in membrane cells and may function to maintain cellular homeostasis throughout gestation in fetal membrane cells.
Cervical Pessary for Prevention of Preterm Birth in Individuals With a Short Cervix: The TOPS Randomized Clinical Trial.
Matthew Hoffman,Rebecca G. Clifton,Joseph R. Biggio,George R. Saade,Lynda G. Ugwu,Monica Longo,Sabine Bousleiman,Kelly S. Clark,William A. Grobman,Heather A. Frey,Suneet P. Chauhan,Lorraine Dugoff,Tracy A. Manuck,Edward K. Chien,Dwight J. Rouse,Hyagriv N. Simhan,M. Sean Esplin,George A. Macones,M. Bickus,Francesca Facco,Alan T.N. Tita,J. Grant,Brian M. Casey,S. Harris,Lorie M. Harper,Donna M. Dunn,Sherri Longo,Melissa A. Hendricks,Kathleen Lata-Arias,Maged M. Costantine,Anna Bartholomew,Dawn M. Cline,S. L. Harper,Calvin L. Ward,Nicole M. Gardner,Stephanie J. Brindle,Samantha Weigand,David S. McKenna,Esther K. Snow,Kathleen Fennig,Mounira Habli,Donna S. Lambers,Marta C. McClellan,Torri D. Metz,A. Sowles,Michael W. Varner,Kim Hill,V. Morby,Catherine E. Meadows,Donna Allard,Erika F. Werner,J. L. Rousseau,J. Milano,Christian M. Pettker,J. Leventhal,Cynthia Gyamfi-Bannerman,Ronald J. Wapner,V. M. Carmona,Brandy S. Firman,Ashley Q. Vanneman,Kristy Palomares,Imene Beche,Daniel W. Skupski,Rosalyn Chan-Akeley,Ashley Salazar,Luis D. Pacheco,Leah M. McCoy,Antonio F. Saad,Sangeeta Jain,Chasey Omere,Corey Clifford,Mollie McDonnold,Edward K. Chien,Wendy B. Dalton,LuAnn A. Polito,Cynthia J. Milluzi,Kathleen M. Kushner,Ashley Maile,Jodi N. Bell,David Hackney,F. Ortiz,S. Timlin,William Goodnight,Tracy A. Manuck,Carmen Beamon,Hannah B. Nun,Kacey Y. Eichelberger,Alison B. Moore,Brenna L. Hughes,Jennifer Ferrara,William A. Grobman,Gail Mallett,Lara J. Stein,Emily S. Miller,Beth A. Plunkett,Kathy M. Kearns,Anna Palatnik,Tyler Malone,Samuel Parry,Cristina Pizzi,Jennifer Craig,Anna Filipczak,Elizabeth Thom,Lindsay Doherty,Aubrey K. Hubbard,P. Erikson,Tara Pinto,Pramiksha Marcharchand,Uma M. Reddy,Menachem Miodovnik,Stephanie Wilson Archer +110 more
- 25 Jul 2023
TL;DR: Cervical pessary in nonlaboring individuals with a singleton gestation and with a cervical length of 20 mm or less did not decrease the risk of preterm birth and was associated with a higher rate of fetal or neonatal/infant mortality.
18
Performance of Risk Assessment Models for Peripartum Thromboprophylaxis.
Jacquelynn P. Tran,Shelby S. Stribling,Uloma C. Ibezim,Chasey Omere,Kayla A. McEnery,Luis D. Pacheco,Gary D.V. Hankins,George R. Saade,Antonio F. Saad +8 more
TL;DR: The rates of VTEs in pregnancy are very low and the available RAMs do not identify most of them, and the RCOG and Caprini RAMs would categorize a large proportion of women as high risk and are associated with high NNTs.
15
The impact of low-dose versus high-dose antibiotic prophylaxis regimens on surgical site infection rates after cesarean delivery.
Mauricio La Rosa,Chasey Omere,Tiffany Redfern,Mahmoud Abdelwahab,Nicholas Spencer,Josephine Villarreal,Gayle Olson,George R. Saade,Antonio F. Saad +8 more
TL;DR: Higher doses of antibiotic prophylaxis did not decrease the rates of SSI after cesarean delivery, and women who received the high-dose antibiotic regimen had lower rates of risk factors for SSI.
8
Randomized Trial Of Fundal Height Versus Point-Of-Care Ultrasound During Routine Antenatal Visits.
Chasey Omere,Daphne D. Arena Goncharov,Claudia Pedroza,Mauricio La Rosa,Mary Munn,Giuseppe Chiossi,Monica Longo,Antonio F. Saad +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the relationship between fetal growth and amniotic fluid volume and adverse pregnancy and neonatal outcomes has been investigated and shown to be associated with stillbirth, postpartum hemorrhage, prolonged labor, birth trauma, neonatal neurologic injury, and death.