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F Xie,
Y Hu,
S E Turvey,
L A Magee,
R M Brunham,
K-C Choi,
M Krajden,
P C K Leung, D M Money,
D M Patrick,
E Thomas,
P von Dadelszen
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ABSTRACT: Pre-eclampsia involves a maternal inflammatory response that differs from both normal pregnancy and normotensive intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR). Our objective was to examine neutrophil Toll-like receptor (TLR), cryopyrin, nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) subunit and interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta), and inflammatory cytokine profiles in women with pre-eclampsia or normotensive IUGR, as well as in normal pregnancy and non-pregnancy controls.
A case-control study was performed. We examined the messenger RNA (mRNA) and protein expressions of TLR4 and TLR2, mRNA levels of cryopyrin, IL-1beta, NF-kappaB subunits p50 and p65, as well as maternal serum inflammatory cytokine profiles (IL-2, IL-6, tumour necrosis factor-alpha [TNF-alpha], interferon-gamma [IFN-gamma] and IL-10) in women with and without pre-eclampsia using real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reactions, flow cytometry and multiplex immunoassays.
A single tertiary maternity hospital in Vancouver, Canada.
Women with early-onset pre-eclampsia (<34 weeks of gestation, n = 25), women with late-onset pre-eclampsia (>or=34(+0) weeks of gestation, n = 25), women with normotensive IUGR (n = 25), women with normal pregnancy (n = 75) and non-pregnancy (n = 25) controls.
Women with pre-eclampsia (as a single combined group of early- and late-onset, and particularly in women with early-onset pre-eclampsia) had increased TLR2 and TLR4 mRNA and protein expressions elevated cryopyrin, NF-kappaB subunit, and IL-1beta mRNA expression, and TNF-alpha:IL-10 and IL-6:IL-10 ratios compared with other groups.
These data suggest that TLRs and cryopyrin may modulate the innate immune response of the maternal syndrome of pre-eclampsia, and might also trigger the differential inflammatory response existing between early onset pre-eclampsia and normotensive IUGR.
BJOG An International Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology 01/2010; 117(1):99-108. · 3.41 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: This study was designed to determine the safety of nevirapine (NVP)-based highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) in a cohort of HIV-positive pregnant women.
This was a prospective cohort study of HIV-positive pregnant women.
All HIV-positive women treated with HAART during pregnancy from January 1997 to February 2004 at the British Columbia (BC) Women's Hospital in Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Demographic and clinical data were collected to compare antiretroviral drug toxicities in women treated antenatally with NVP-based or non-NVP-based HAART. Multivariate analyses were then used to investigate determinants of toxicity.
From 1997 to 2004, 103 HIV-positive pregnant women received HAART. Equivalent numbers of women were initially treated with NVP-based (54%) and non-NVP-based (46%) HAART. The groups did not differ by clinical or demographic parameters and duration of HAART exposure was similar between groups. Toxicities necessitating treatment discontinuation were observed in 6 of 56 NVP-exposed women (2 cases each of grade 2, 3, and 4 toxicity) compared with 1 of 47 in the non-NVP-exposed women. First time use of NVP approached significance as a predictor for toxicity, with a toxicity rate of 12.5% (6/48) observed among those taking NVP for the first time (adjusted OR 2.68, 95% CI 0.49-14.6).
Continuous NVP use in pregnancy resulted in a relatively higher rate of toxicity, and all cases of NVP toxicity occurred in women exposed to NVP for the first time during pregnancy.
BJOG An International Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology 10/2008; 115(10):1297-302. · 3.41 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: A case of pelvic inflammatory disease in a sexually non-active 13 year old girl is described, with evidence of pinworms as the cause. Albendazole treatment cleared the infestation but the patient suffered subsequent bouts of lower abdominal pain. The literature is reviewed regarding abdominal pathology associated with ectopic migration of pinworms.
Archives of Disease in Childhood 07/2002; 86(6):439-40. · 2.88 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The objectives of this study were to assess the effect of British Columbia's June 1994 guidelines for prenatal HIV screening on the rate of maternal-fetal HIV transmission and to estimate the cost-effectiveness of such screening.
The authors conducted a retrospective review of pregnancy and delivery statistics, HIV screening practices, laboratory testing volume, prenatal and labour management decisions of HIV-positive women, maternal-fetal transmission rates and associated costs.
Over 1995 and 1996, 135,681 women were pregnant and 92,645 carried to term. The rate of HIV testing increased from 55% to 76% of pregnancies on chart review at one hospital between November 1995 and November 1996. On the basis of seroprevalence studies, an estimated 50.2 pregnancies and 34.3 (95% confidence interval 17.6 to 51.0) live births to HIV-positive women were expected. Of 42 identified mother-infant pairs with an estimated date of delivery during 1995 or 1996, 25 were known only through screening. Of these 25 cases, there were 10 terminations, 1 spontaneous abortion and 14 cases in which the woman elected to carry the pregnancy to term with antiretroviral therapy. There was one stillbirth. One instance of maternal-fetal HIV transmission occurred among the 13 live births. The net savings attributable to prevented infections among babies carried to term were $165,586, with a saving per prevented case of $75,266.
A routine offer of pregnancy screening for HIV in a low-prevalence setting reduces the rate of maternal-fetal HIV transmission and may rival other widely accepted health care expenditures in terms of cost-effectiveness.
Canadian Medical Association Journal 11/1998; 159(8):942-7. · 8.22 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: To study maternal and neonatal effects of combination nucleoside analog therapy administered to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected pregnant women for maternal indications.
A multicenter, prospective observational study was undertaken at six perinatal centers in the United States and Canada that supported regional referral programs for the treatment of HIV-infected pregnant women. Demographic, laboratory, and pregnancy outcome data were collected for 39 women whose antiretroviral treatment regimens were expanded to include more than one nucleoside analog for maternal indications. The 40 newborns were monitored at pediatric referral centers through at least three months of age to ascertain their HIV infection status.
For all 39 women, zidovudine (ZDV) therapy was instituted at 13.4 +/- 8.2 weeks, with a second agent (lamivudine [3TC] in 85% of cases) being added at a mean gestational age of 17.6 weeks. Duration of therapy with two agents was 20.6 +/- 10.4 weeks overall, with no women stopping medications because of side effects or toxicity. No significant changes in maternal laboratory values were seen, except for an increase in mean corpuscular volume, over the course of pregnancy. No clinically significant adverse neonatal outcomes were noted, with all but the three preterm newborns leaving hospital with their mothers. Neonatal anemia (hematocrit < 50%) was seen in 62% of newborns, with no children needing transfusion; mild elevations of liver function tests, primarily aspartate aminotransferase, were noted in 58% of newborns tested, though none were clinically jaundiced. Overall rate of neonatal HIV infection was 2.5% (95% confidence interval: 0.1-13.2%).
Combination antiretroviral therapy during pregnancy with two nucleoside analogs was well-tolerated by mothers and newborns, with no significant short-term toxicities or side effects noted. Surveillance of exposed newborns' hematologic and liver function appears warranted.
Infectious Diseases in Obstetrics and Gynecology 02/1998; 6(6):237-43.
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ABSTRACT: A cross-sectional study of 306 women was done to correlate antibody to the chlamydial hsp60 (Chsp60) with epidemiologic, serologic, and laparoscopic findings of women with and without pelvic inflammatory disease (PID). Of the 306 women, 150 had confirmed PID by laparoscopic (n = 69) or histologic (n = 81) criteria, and 156 sexually transmitted disease clinic attendees without clinical PID did (n = 94) or did not (n = 62) have chlamydia. In multivariate analyses, Chsp60 antibody was independently associated with confirmed PID, age > 20 years, nonwhite race, > 10 lifetime sex partners, current oral contraceptive use, and IgG antibody titers; it was not associated with a positive Chlamydia trachomatis culture. Among the 69 women with laparoscopic evidence of PID, the highest level of Chsp60 antibody (optical density > 1.0) was found in 8 (80%) of 10 women with occluded tubes, compared with 11 (19%) of 58 with patent tubes (P < .001). We conclude that antibody to Chsp60 was significantly correlated with risk factors for PID, confirmed PID, and occluded fallopian tubes but not with acute C. trachomatis infection without PID.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases 06/1997; 175(6):1453-8. · 6.41 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Our purpose was to examine clinical, microbiologic, serologic, and laparoscopic findings associated with perihepatitis.
In a prospective study of 157 women with a clinical diagnosis of pelvic inflammatory disease, 27 women with laparoscopically confirmed perihepatitis and salpingitis were compared with 46 patients with salpingitis alone.
Both current use or a history of ever using oral contraceptives was negatively associated with perihepatitis (p = 0.05 and p = 0.008, respectively). Moderate-to-severe pelvic adhesions were present at laparoscopy significantly more often in the perihepatitis-salpingitis group (70%) than in the salpingitis alone group (35%, p = 0.003). Antibody to the chlamydial 60 kd heat-shock protein at > or =0.5 optical density was detected in 67% of the perihepatitis-salpingitis group and in 28% of the salpingitis alone group (p = 0.005), and the median titer was significantly higher in the former group (p = 0.02).
Compared with women with salpingitis alone, patients with perihepatitis-salpingitis do not have distinctive clinical or microbiologic findings but do manifest a higher prevalence of moderate-to-severe pelvic adhesions and both a higher prevalence and higher titers of antibody to the chlamydial heat-shock protein-60.
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology 04/1997; 176(4):870-7. · 3.47 Impact Factor