Influence of Placental Malaria Infection on Foetal Outcome in the Gambia: Twenty Years after Ian McGregor

Malaria infection in pregnancy has serious health consequences among mothers and offspring. The influence of placental malaria infection on foetal outcome was studied in a Gambian rural setting where few pregnant women take antimalarial chemoprophylaxis. During July-December 1997, three hundred thir...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of health, population and nutrition population and nutrition, 2002-03, Vol.20 (1), p.4-11
Hauptverfasser: Okoko, Brown J., Ota, Martin O., Yamuah, Lawrence K., Idiong, David, Mkpanam, Stella N., Avieka, Akum, Banya, Winston A.S., Osinusi, Kike
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Malaria infection in pregnancy has serious health consequences among mothers and offspring. The influence of placental malaria infection on foetal outcome was studied in a Gambian rural setting where few pregnant women take antimalarial chemoprophylaxis. During July-December 1997, three hundred thirteen mother-newborn pairs (singletons only) were consecutively recruited into a study of the effects of placental malaria infection on the outcome of pregnancy. Placental blood and tissue were collected at delivery. Babies were clinically assessed until discharge. The overall prevalence of placental malaria infection was 51.1% by placental histology and 37.1% by blood smear. The primigravid women were more susceptible to placental malaria than the multigravidae (65.3% vs 44.7%, p=0.01). Placental malaria was significantly associated with pre-term delivery and intrauterine growth retardation (p
ISSN:1606-0997
2072-1315