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1.
Postgrad. Med. J. Ghana ; 8(2): 134-139, 2019. ilus
Article in English | AIM | ID: biblio-1268728

ABSTRACT

Objective: Malaria remains a complex and overwhelming health problem affecting vulnerable groups such as pregnant women and their infants in Ghana. Malaria during pregnancy does not only pose a threat to the mother but can cause serious structural damages to the placenta and subsequently affect the pregnancy outcome. The aim of the study was to investigate the impact of Plasmodium parasites on the placenta and perinatal outcome of women delivering at Korle Bu Teaching Hospital. A better understanding of the impact of malaria parasites on the placenta morphology and prenatal outcome is crucial for better management of pregnant women and their babies. Methods: The study involved testing blood collected from postpartum placentas and examining the placental tissue for Plasmodium parasites, after which they were classified as study group (Plasmodium positive) or control (Plasmodium negative). The patients in the study group with similar gestational and maternal age were matched with patients from the control group. The morphological characteristics of the placenta and the perinatal outcome of the two patient groups were compared using an unpaired t-test. Results: Sixteen (16, 13.6%) out of 118 women tested positive for Plasmodium parasites on the maternal side of the placenta by both rapid diagnostic test and microscopy and /or tested positive for malarial parasite during pregnancy, whiles the rest (102, 86.4%) had no history of malaria in the index pregnancy and tested negative. The mean placenta weight was significantly reduced in the study group (difference: -102.0g; 95% Confidence Interval [CI]: 424.4g, 486.6g) who delivered during early term (p=0.02). Patients in the study group, who delivered during late term, had a significantly reduced mean placenta diameter (difference: -2.5cm; 95% CI: 20.0cm, 21.4cm) (p=0.003) and delivered infants with lower mean birth weight (difference: - 0.693kg; 95 CI: 3.268kg, 3.475kg) (p<0.001). Conclusion: Malaria during pregnancy does not only pose a threat to the mother but to the fetus and our results add evidence that malaria parasites cause alterations to certain morphological characteristics of the placenta which subsequently affect the birth weight as the pregnancy progresses to late term


Subject(s)
Case-Control Studies , Ghana , Hospitals, Teaching , Infant, Newborn , Malaria/diagnosis , Placenta Diseases/mortality , Pregnancy Complications, Parasitic/mortality , Pregnancy Outcome/epidemiology
2.
S. Afr. j. child health (Online) ; 11(4): 180-186, 2017. ilus
Article in English | AIM | ID: biblio-1270313

ABSTRACT

Background. Neonatal tetanus(NT) has remained an important cause of neonatal morbidity and mortality in the tropics where high prevalence of placental malaria coexists. The current strategy for the control of NT involves stimulating production of protective level of anti-tetanus antibody in the mother, through tetanus toxoid immunization, and transferring same through the placental to the foetus. Placental malaria is known to alter the morphology and functions of the placenta, but the effect on transfer of anti-tetanus antibody specifically, remains unsettled. We studied the influence of placental malaria on transplacental transfer of anti-tetanus antibodies among mother-infant pairs at the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital North-Eastern Nigeria.Method. Maternal and cord blood samples were collected from 162 mother-baby pair and analysed for anti-tetanus antibody levels using ELISA. Placental biopsy was also taken from each mother-baby pair and placental malaria diagnosed histologically.Results. One hundred and sixteen (71.6%) of the 162 mother-infant pairs were positive for placental malaria out of which 59(50.9%) had chronic-active, 44 (37.9%) acute and 13 (11.2%) had past placental malaria. Forty-one (25.3%) babies were classified as seronegative for tetanus antibodies of whom 32 were delivered to mothers who were positive for placental malaria. Fifty-six (34.5%) mother-infant pairs had poor placental transfer for tetanus antibodies as signified by cord-maternal ratio of < 1.0 antibodies, out of these, 40 (24.7%) were positive for placental malaria. There was statistically significant association between type of placental malaria and serostatus (p = 0.0009) and efficiency of placental transfer (p = 0.0340). Mothers with chronic-active malaria were 7.4 times more likely to deliver a seronegative infant compared to mothers with acute malaria (p = 0.0002, OR =7.353, 95% CI = 2.327 -23.25). Similarly, maternal-infant pair with chronic-active malaria were 2.9 times more likely to have inefficient placental transfer (p = 0.0221, OR = 2.859, 95% CI = 1.200 ­ 6,859).Conclusion. Placental malaria has remained a very common medical condition in Maiduguri among pregnant women and may partly account for the high level of neonatal tetanus prevalent in the area


Subject(s)
Infant, Newborn , Malaria , Nigeria , Placenta Diseases , Pregnant Women , Tetanus
3.
Cah. Santé ; 2(3): 176-179, 1992.
Article in French | AIM | ID: biblio-1260219

ABSTRACT

L'infestation placentaire par le plasmodium a ete etudiee a Bobo-Dioulasso (Burkina Faso) pendant deux ans; de juillet a decembre chez 342 parturientes au total. Ce travail complete les precedentes enquetes concernant l'etude du paludisme urbain dans la seconde ville du Burkina Faso. Plasmodium falciparum est la seule espece observee. Le taux d'infection placentaire est de 14 pour cent. Il est plus elevee en novembre et decembre que durant les quatre mois precedents. Il est egalement significativement plus eleve chez les femmes habitant a proximite du cours d'eau qui traverse la ville que chez celles habitant les autres quartiers de la ville. Cette etude apparait etre un indicateur sensible de l'infestation palustre au sein d'un milieu urbain globalement peu favorable a la transmission


Subject(s)
Malaria/epidemiology , Malaria/transmission , Placenta Diseases , Urban Population
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