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Obstetric and perinatal consequences of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection: a review
Authors:C S Peckham  Y D Senturia  A E Ades
Abstract:Pediatric acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) was known to be a new disease that could be acquired from the mother even before human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) was identified. The suggested routes of transmission of infection are intrauterine, perinatal--from contact with infected maternal genital secretions, or through breastfeeding. At this time the problem in Europe concerns primarily women in high-risk groups: intravenous drug abusers, prostitutes, women from countries where the prevalence of HIV is high, and women whose sexual partners are in a high-risk group. In the future, the infection may extend beyond women in high-risk groups as the disease becomes more prevalent in the community. It has been claimed that pregnancy accelerates symptoms in women who are HIV positive, yet this is based on only a series of case reports of severe infection in pregnancy and on the development of AIDS in asymptomatic women in pregnancy subsequent to the birth of an AIDS child. The only data capable of shedding some light on this issue would be a prospective followup of both pregnant and nonpregnant HIV-positive women from similar high-risk groups. Such a study is ongoing in the US. An increasing number of case reports suggest intrauterine transmission of infection. The following 3 case reports provide clear evidence of intrauterine transmission. Sprecher et al. (1986) detected HIV antigen in amniotic fluid and fetal tissues from a pregnancy termination at 15 weeks gestation in a woman with stage IV AIDS and Kaposi sarcoma. Lapointe et al. (1985) reported an infant born by cesarean section at 28 weeks gestation to a mother with terminal aids. A new dysmorphic syndrome recently has been described in children with symptomatic HIV infection (Marion et al., 1986). HIV has been isolated from cervical secretions (Fogt et al., 1986; Wofsy et al., 1986), which suggests that this cold be another source of infection. There is 1 report of isolation of HIV from the noncellular fraction of breast milk (Thirty et al., 1985). Several case reports have described acquired immunodeficiency in infants for whom the only known risk factor was neonatal transfusion from an individual later found to be suffering from AIDS. The risk of transmission from an infected mother to her infant is unknown, but the best available evidence comes from a study of children born to women who had previously given birth to a child with AIDS (Scott et al, 1985). Of 12 children, 4 developed AIDS or Aids-related complex. Clinical problems among children with AIDS or AIDS-related complex have been fully described. The fatality rate of children with AIDS is high, but the ultimate progress of children with less severe disease or who have asymptomatic infection is known.
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