All Stories

  1. Why reproduction has probably been very problematic in Neanderthals: the fabulous history of (pre)eclampsia
  2. A 2025-update of “historical evolution of ideas on eclampsia/preeclampsia’’ (2017, workshop reunion 2016)
  3. Issues of pregnancies with polyhydramnios in Reunion Island
  4. Why do nulliparous teenagers have the highest rate of unassisted vaginal deliveries compared to their older counterparts?
  5. Closing of a 2-decade's toxic debate concerning the cause of preeclampsia in multiparas
  6. Clear amniotic fluid aspiration syndrome: A novel description of an old entity
  7. Quantitative Discrimination of Small for Gestational Age (Sga) Singleton Newborns. Incidences, Risk Factors and Foetal Outcomes of the Three Major Subtypes of Sga: A 23-Year Cohort of 8,601 Singleton Sga (Out of 83,917 Births)
  8. Placenta and maternal endothelium during preeclampsia: Disruption of the glycocalyx explains increased inositol phosphoglycans and angiogenic factors in maternal blood
  9. Essential Knowledge to Impart to Young Women about the Specifics of Human Sexuality/ Reproduction
  10. Preface. 12th International Workshop Reunion island reproductive immunology, immunological tolerance and immunology of preeclampsia; 12–15 December 2022
  11. Preeclampsia in 2023: Time for preventing early onset- and term preeclampsia: The paramount role of gestational weight gain.
  12. Obesity class I and II and IOM 2009 gestational weight gain recommendations 5–9 kg. An audit on 10,000 term singleton deliveries
  13. The necessity to specify paternities in all obstetrical files in multigravidae
  14. Establishing Optimal Gestational Weight Gain in Twin Pregnancies With a Prerequisite Rationale—A Tour de Force
  15. It is Possible to Establish Quickly a Smart-phone Calculator for Optimal Gestational Weight Gain Specific for Indian Pregnant Women
  16. Progress in the understanding of the pathophysiology of immunologic maladaptation related to early-onset preeclampsia and metabolic syndrome related to late-onset preeclampsia
  17. Preeclampsia—an immune disease? An epidemiologic narrative
  18. Primipaternities and human birthweights
  19. Risk Factors for Early and Late Onset Preeclampsia in Reunion Island: Multivariate Analysis of Singleton and Twin Pregnancies. A 20-Year Population-Based Cohort of 2120 Preeclampsia Cases
  20. Women and Pregnancies as an Immediate Target against the Obesity Epidemic
  21. Epidemiological evidence that severe obese women (pre-pregnancy BMI ≥40 kg/m 2 ) should lose weight during their pregnancy
  22. Risk Factors for Early and Late Onset Preeclampsia in Women without Pathological History: Confirmation of the Paramount Effect of Excessive Maternal Pre-Pregnancy Corpulence on Risk for Late Onset Preeclampsia
  23. Adolphe Quetelet’s Premonition Two Centuries after: Besides Its Implications in Physiology (Obesity, Type 2 Diabetes), Its Paramount Importance in Human Pregnancy
  24. Gestational weight gain and rate of late-onset preeclampsia: a retrospective analysis on 57 000 singleton pregnancies in Reunion Island
  25. The Urgent Need to Optimize Gestational Weight in Overweight/Obese Women to Lower Maternal- Fetal Morbidities: A Retrospective Analysis on 59,000 Singleton Term Pregnancies
  26. Strange linearities in human pregnancy. The immediate immense consequences for personal women’s reproductive lives
  27. Increased BMI has a linear association with late-onset preeclampsia: A population-based study
  28. The burden to be second twin: a population-based study of 2686 twins: (2124 dichorionic). Proposal of the concept of mobility
  29. Relationship between pre-pregnancy maternal BMI and optimal weight gain in singleton pregnancies