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2.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1401771

ABSTRACT

Some of the alternative treatments to avoid termination of pregnancy in cases where the fetus is affected by toxoplasmosis is to treat it as soon as the diagnosis has been made. The authors who already have experience of using pyrimethamine with sulfadoxoine (Fansidar) in the post-natal treatment of congenital infection, thought after reviewing the literature that this association of drugs would be harmless if applied during pregnancy. The principal risk that arises in the fetus is the teratogenicity of each of the components of pyrimethamine and sulfadoxine and also their associations. In animals pyrimethamine can increase the frequency of cleft palates probably because of its antifolinic action but there is no formal proof that it is teratogenic in human beings. Furthermore, the theoretical risk of karnicerus in the new born using the Sulfonamide has not been demonstrated. In the mother the main but rare risk (1 in 75,000) seems to be for the production of severe skin lesions such as Lyell and Stevens-Johnson which could be brought about by sulfonamides, but not particularly sulfadoxine.


Subject(s)
Antimalarials/adverse effects , Pregnancy Complications, Parasitic/drug therapy , Prenatal Care/standards , Pyrimethamine/adverse effects , Sulfadoxine/adverse effects , Toxoplasmosis/drug therapy , Cleft Palate/chemically induced , Cleft Palate/epidemiology , Contraindications , Drug Combinations , Female , Humans , Kernicterus/chemically induced , Kernicterus/epidemiology , Pregnancy , Stevens-Johnson Syndrome/diagnosis , Stevens-Johnson Syndrome/epidemiology , Stevens-Johnson Syndrome/etiology
3.
Presse Med ; 19(8): 367-8, 1990 Mar 03.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2138318

ABSTRACT

The authors report 2 cases of congenital toxoplasmosis fortuitously diagnosed in 2 newborn infants aged 12 and 35 days respectively whose mothers had no anti-Toxoplasma antibodies detectable at the time of birth. These cases prompted us to carry out, over an 18 months' period, a systematic postnatal control of all pregnant women who were still seronegative at the time of delivery. This enabled us to detect 4 cases of perinatal maternal infection with Toxoplasma contamination in 2 neonates. In view of these results, and in order not to miss any maternal infection at the very end of pregnancy, it seems advisable to complete the control of seronegative women by taking a last blood sample about 30 days after they have given birth.


Subject(s)
Pregnancy Complications, Infectious , Toxoplasmosis, Congenital/diagnosis , Adult , Delivery, Obstetric , Female , Humans , Immunologic Tests , Infant, Newborn , Pregnancy
4.
Rev Fr Gynecol Obstet ; 84(12): 905-13, 1989 Dec.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2696063

ABSTRACT

In 92,130 pregnancies followed between 1980 and 1987, 48 cases of hyperthyroidism were reported including 38 Grave's diseases, 5 toxic adenomas, 4 multinodules goiters. In comparing the results with those mentioned in the literature, a number of conclusions may be reached. In case of hyperthyroidism treated before the pregnancy or discovered at the beginning, there is, in every other case, an aggravation at the end of the first trimester, then a stabilization in the 2nd or 3rd trimester and finally an aggravation in the post-partum period. There is a high rate of abortions (35 p. cent), a delayed intra-uterine growth in half of the cases. The problem of the treatment is of paramount importance; there is no problem with Beta-blockers but the SAT are not without danger: risk of hypothyroidism and fetal goiter, but also risk of maternal hypothyroidism. From the 15th week, the doses should therefore be decreased, and sometimes the treatment discontinued and replaced with Beta-blockers. The best SAT drug during pregnancy is the propylthioracile which is the least likely to cross the fetal barrier. Surgery is only exceptionally indicated. In a woman who is cured from her Grave's disease, recurrences are always possible, and also fetal hyperthyroidism caused by crossing of thyreostimulins immunoglobins, even in case of maternal euthyroidism.


Subject(s)
Carbimazole/therapeutic use , Hyperthyroidism/drug therapy , Pregnancy Complications/drug therapy , Propylthiouracil/therapeutic use , Adult , Female , France , Humans , Hyperthyroidism/diagnosis , Hyperthyroidism/physiopathology , Multicenter Studies as Topic , Pregnancy , Pregnancy Complications/physiopathology , Pregnancy Complications/surgery , Pregnancy Outcome , Retrospective Studies
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