Rubéola na gestação: repercussões sobre o produto conceptual. / Rubella in pregnancy: effects on the fetus and developing child

AUTOR(ES)
DATA DE PUBLICAÇÃO

1998

RESUMO

OBJECTIVES: Our aim was to analyse rubella effects on the fetus, new-born and child. MATERIAL AND METHODS: We analysed 35 patients with suspicious rubella during pregnancy. According to presence or absence of symptoms they were divided in two groups. Group 1: 15 patients presenting rash in which serology was positive. Grupo2: 20 symptomless patients found to have positive IgM during routine prenatal care. Monthly ultrasonographic evaluation was accomplished in all patients and in group 1 they were also offered prenatal invasive testing. Fetal echocardiography and Dopplers were performed. After birth, the placentas were submitted to pathological examination. The liveborn babies had clinical and serological examination. Auditory tests, brain scan, fundoscopy and postnatal echocardiography were also performed. RESULTS: In group 1: fetal infection occurred in 9 cases and vertical transmission between 2 to 14 weeks was 64,9%. Malformation was present in 37,5% of infected cases. Ultrasound revealed symmetrical intra-uterine growth retardation in all infected fetuses that reached the third trimester, and started around 25,1 weeks. Cordocentesis was accomplished in 9 cases and all the infected ones, presented positive IgM and erythroblastosis in cord blood. PCR in the amniotic fluid was positive in all 3 cases it was performed. 50% of the infected fetuses placentas presented signs of viral infection. The average gestacional age of delivery among infected cases was 33,8 weeks and medium birth weight was 1365,6g. All 6 liveborn infected babies were small for gestacional age and presented deafness. Survival among infected cases was 62,5%, medium follow-up was 35,2 months. In group 2: the infection was not demonstrated in any of neonates, although we could demonstrate a congenital infection caused by the Epstein-Barr virus. CONCLUSIONS: Vertical transmission of the rubella in the first trimester seems to vary among different populations, as well as the presence of the associated defects in the new-born. Invasive diagnosis and ultrasonographic follow-up presented good sensitivity and specificity. We could establish the pattern of fetal grown associated to the infection. The isolated presence of a positive rubella IgM in pregnancy did not correlated with congenital rubella, but it can be related to other congenital infections.

ASSUNTO(S)

follow-up studies cordocentese/métodos ultrasonography prenatal/methods cordocentesis/methods transmissão vertical de doenças disease transmission vertical seguimentos rubella syndrome congenital/transmission síndrome da rubéola congênita/transmissão pregnancy complications infectious complicações infecciosas na gravidez ultrassonografia pré-natal/métodos

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