| Literature DB >> 21453493 |
Bich-Tram Huynh1, Nadine Fievet, Gildas Gbaguidi, Sophie Borgella, Blaise Guézo Mévo, Achille Massougbodji, Philippe Deloron, Michel Cot.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It is generally agreed that in high transmission areas, pregnant women have acquired a partial immunity to malaria and when infected they present few or no symptoms. However, longitudinal cohort studies investigating the clinical presentation of malaria infection in pregnant women in stable endemic areas are lacking, and the few studies exploring this issue are unconclusive.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21453493 PMCID: PMC3076273 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-10-72
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Figure 1Study profile.
General characteristics of the mothers
| Factor | Mean (SD) or N (%) |
|---|---|
| 26.4 (6.2) | |
| 17.2(4.7) | |
| 1 | 179 (18.2%) |
| 2 | 219 (22.3%) |
| > 2 | 584 (59.5%) |
| 314 (32.0%) | |
| None | 550 (56.0%) |
| Primary | 290 (29.5%) |
| Secondary | 142 (14.5%) |
| 4.4 (1.6) | |
| 0.8 (0.9) | |
| Negative | 846 (86.2%) |
| Positive | 16 (1.6%) |
| Unknown | 120 (12.2%) |
Factors associated with malaria infection (assessed by thick blood smear) during antenatal visits, unscheduled visits and at delivery
| Observed | Univariate analysis | Multivariate analysis after MICE** | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Malaria infected n (%) | No malaria infected n(%) | p-value | Adjusted OR [95% CI] | p-value | ||
| Fever | No | 374 (94.2) | 3842 (97.0) | 0.003 * | ||
| Yes | 23 (5.8) | 118 (3.0) | ||||
| Headache | No | 239 (71.1) | 2907 (81.8) | < 0.001 * | 1.9 [1.3-2.6] | < 0.001 * |
| Yes | 97 (28.9) | 648 (18.2) | ||||
| Nausea | No | 323 (96.1) | 3444 (96.9) | 0.438 | ||
| Yes | 13 (3.9) | 110 (3.1) | ||||
| IPT | 0 dose | 256 (64.5) | 1434 (36.2) | < 0.001 * | 0.6 [0.5-0.7] | < 0.001 * |
| 1 dose | 39 (9.8) | 840 (21.2) | ||||
| 2 doses | 102 (25.7) | 1685 (42.6) | ||||
| Rainy season | No | 207 (52.1) | 2150 (54.3) | 0.412 | ||
| Yes | 190 (47.9) | 1810 (45.7) | ||||
| Bed net use | No | 221 (55.7) | 1450 (36.6) | < 0.001 * | 1.4 [1.1-1.8] | 0.003 * |
| Yes | 176 (44.3) | 2510 (63.4) | ||||
| Fever | No | 66 (50.8) | 616 (88.5) | < 0.001 * | 5.2 [3.2-8.1] | < 0.001 * |
| Yes | 64 (49.2) | 80 (11.5) | ||||
| Headache | No | 24 (18.5) | 352 (50.7) | < 0.001 * | 2.1 [1.3-3.6] | 0.004 * |
| Yes | 106 (81.5) | 342 (49.3) | ||||
| Nausea | No | 109 (83.9) | 605 (87.1) | 0.326 | ||
| Yes | 21 (16.1) | 90 (12.9) | ||||
| Feverishness in the last 48 hrs | No | 54 (41.5) | 498 (72.6) | < 0.001 * | ||
| Yes | 76 (58.5) | 188 (27.4) | ||||
| Shivering | No | 59 (45.4) | 567 (81.6) | < 0.001 * | 3.11 [2.0-4.9] | < 0.001 * |
| Yes | 71 (54.6) | 128 (18.4) | ||||
| IPT | 0 dose | 33 (25.4) | 140 (20.1) | 0.058 | ||
| 1 dose | 15 (11.5) | 138 (19.8) | ||||
| 2 doses | 82 (63.1) | 418 (60.1) | ||||
| Rainy season | No | 70 (53.9) | 414 (59.5) | 0.231 | ||
| Yes | 60 (46.1) | 282 (40.5) | ||||
| Bed net use | No | 33 (25.4) | 193 (27.7) | 0.582 | ||
| Yes | 97 (74.6) | 503 (72.3) | ||||
| Primigravidae | No | 54 (76.1) | 537 (84.3) | 0.076 | ||
| Yes | 17 (23.9) | 100 (15.7) | ||||
| Age under 25 | No | 38 (53.5) | 384 (61.4) | 0.196 | ||
| Yes | 33 (46.5) | 241 (38.6) | ||||
| Fever | No | 59 (83.1) | 601 (94.4) | < 0.001 * | 3.6 [1.7-7.7] | 0.001 * |
| Yes | 12 (16.9) | 36 (5.7) | ||||
| Headache | No | 63 (92.7) | 610 (98.2) | 0.004 * | 3.6 [1.1-11.6] | 0.029 * |
| Yes | 5 (7.3) | 11 (1.8) | ||||
| Nausea | No | 66 (97.1) | 609 (98.1) | 0.576 | ||
| Yes | 2 (2.9) | 12 (1.9) | ||||
| Rainy season | No | 38 (53.5) | 360 (56.5) | 0.630 | ||
| Yes | 33 (46.5) | 277 (43.5) | ||||
| Bednet use | No | 13 (18.3) | 113 (17.7) | 0.905 | ||
| Yes | 58 (81.7) | 524 (82.3) | ||||
* Statistically significant results (p < 0.05)
** adjusted on women's characteristics (parity and age)
Figure 2Distribution of symptomatic malaria infections during unscheduled visits.