Literature DB >> 8568611

Pregnancy, immunosuppression and reactivation of latent toxoplasmosis.

K Biedermann1, M Flepp, W Fierz, H Joller-Jemelka, P Kleihues.   

Abstract

Toxoplasmosis is a chronic, latent infection which can be reactivated in the presence of immunosuppression. The critical question in obstetrics is whether toxoplasmosis may be reactivated in the presence of the physiological "immunosuppression" of pregnancy. Standard in vitro tests, done in 24 healthy pregnant women and compared with the literature, show no significant changes in humoral and cellular immunity during pregnancy. However, the fact that some infections occur more frequently and more severely than in non-pregnant women (e.g. those due to cytomegalovirus (CMV) and human papilloma virus (HPV) points to a degree of pregnancy-associated immunosuppression. Non-rejection of the semiallogenic fetus is achieved in presence of maternal immunocompetence and is explained mainly by local changes in immune function, mediated by inhibitors of decidual, placental and fetal origin, and by the absence of class II histocompatibility antigens at the fetomaternal interface. Immune status allowing reactivation of toxoplasmosis was studied in a selected group of (predominantly male) AIDS patients from the Swiss HIV Cohort study. Shortly before (cerebral) reactivation of toxoplasmosis, 92% of these patients had very low CD4 lymphocyte counts (mean 50 cells/microliters, i.e. lower than ever recorded in a normal uncomplicated pregnancy). In a larger population of 48 women receiving immunosuppressive therapy after organ transplantation, not a single case of cerebral toxoplasmosis was observed during pregnancy, while in the 105 HIV-positive women in the Swiss HIV and Pregnancy study, there was only one case of cerebral toxoplasmosis during pregnancy and the puerperium (20 CD4/microliters), even though some 17% of those sampled (18/105) had CD4 levels below 200 cells/microliters on at least one occasion during pregnancy. These findings explain why latent toxoplasmosis is not reactivated in normal pregnancy, and why it is only likely in an immunosuppressed mother when her CD4 lymphocyte count is very low (< 200 cells/microliters). In such cases, a prophylactic treatment to prevent maternal reactivation and vertical transmission of toxoplasmosis may be useful.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 8568611     DOI: 10.1515/jpme.1995.23.3.191

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Perinat Med        ISSN: 0300-5577            Impact factor:   1.901


  7 in total

1.  Recurrence rates of ocular toxoplasmosis during pregnancy.

Authors:  Arthur M D Braakenburg; Catherine M Crespi; Gary N Holland; Sheng Wu; Fei Yu; Aniki Rothova
Journal:  Am J Ophthalmol       Date:  2014-01-09       Impact factor: 5.258

2.  Toxoplasma gondii antibody profile in HIV-infected pregnant women and the risk of congenital toxoplasmosis.

Authors:  E G Lago; G S Conrado; C S Piccoli; R L Carvalho; A L Bender
Journal:  Eur J Clin Microbiol Infect Dis       Date:  2008-10-15       Impact factor: 3.267

3.  Toxoplasmosis during pregnancy: a case report and review of the literature.

Authors:  C Giannoulis; B Zournatzi; A Giomisi; E Diza; I Tzafettas
Journal:  Hippokratia       Date:  2008-07       Impact factor: 0.471

4.  The interaction of classical complement component C1 with parasite and host calreticulin mediates Trypanosoma cruzi infection of human placenta.

Authors:  Christian Castillo; Galia Ramírez; Carolina Valck; Lorena Aguilar; Ismael Maldonado; Carlos Rosas; Norbel Galanti; Ulrike Kemmerling; Arturo Ferreira
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2013-08-22

5.  Disseminated Mycobacterium avium complex infection in an immunocompetent pregnant woman.

Authors:  Joon Young Song; Cheong Won Park; Sae Yoon Kee; Won Seok Choi; Eun Young Kang; Jang Wook Sohn; Woo Joo Kim; Min Ja Kim; Hee Jin Cheong
Journal:  BMC Infect Dis       Date:  2006-10-22       Impact factor: 3.090

6.  Seroepidemiology of Toxoplasma gondii infection in women of child-bearing age in central Ethiopia.

Authors:  Endrias Zewdu Gebremedhin; Anteneh Hailu Abebe; Tesfaye Sisay Tessema; Kassu Desta Tullu; Girmay Medhin; Maria Vitale; Vincenzo Di Marco; Eric Cox; Pierre Dorny
Journal:  BMC Infect Dis       Date:  2013-02-26       Impact factor: 3.090

Review 7.  The Importance of IgG Avidity and the Polymerase Chain Reaction in Treating Toxoplasmosis during Pregnancy: Current Knowledge.

Authors:  João Bortoletti Filho; Edward Araujo Júnior; Natália da Silva Carvalho; Talita Micheletti Helfer; Priscila de Oliveira Nogueira Serni; Luciano Marcondes Machado Nardozza; Antonio Fernandes Moron
Journal:  Interdiscip Perspect Infect Dis       Date:  2013-09-26
  7 in total

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