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Malaria associated symptoms in pregnant women followed-up in Benin
by
Massougbodji, Achille
, Borgella, Sophie
, Deloron, Philippe
, Huynh, Bich-Tram
, Gbaguidi, Gildas
, Fievet, Nadine
, Mévo, Blaise Guézo
, Cot, Michel
in
Adult
/ Benin - epidemiology
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedicine
/ Blood pressure
/ Care and treatment
/ Clinics
/ Cohort Studies
/ Cohorts
/ Complications and side effects
/ Diagnosis
/ Entomology
/ Female
/ Fever
/ Follow-Up Studies
/ Headache
/ Health aspects
/ Hospitals
/ Human diseases
/ Humans
/ Immunity
/ Immunology
/ Infections
/ Infectious Diseases
/ Malaria
/ Malaria - epidemiology
/ Malaria - pathology
/ Microbiology
/ Midwifery
/ Mothers
/ Newborn babies
/ Parasitology
/ Pregnancy
/ Pregnancy Complications, Infectious - epidemiology
/ Pregnancy Complications, Infectious - pathology
/ Pregnancy, Complications of
/ Pregnant women
/ Prevention
/ Prospective Studies
/ Public Health
/ Risk factors
/ Rural Population
/ Studies
/ Symptoms
/ Tropical Medicine
/ Vector-borne diseases
/ Women
/ Womens health
2011
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Malaria associated symptoms in pregnant women followed-up in Benin
by
Massougbodji, Achille
, Borgella, Sophie
, Deloron, Philippe
, Huynh, Bich-Tram
, Gbaguidi, Gildas
, Fievet, Nadine
, Mévo, Blaise Guézo
, Cot, Michel
in
Adult
/ Benin - epidemiology
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedicine
/ Blood pressure
/ Care and treatment
/ Clinics
/ Cohort Studies
/ Cohorts
/ Complications and side effects
/ Diagnosis
/ Entomology
/ Female
/ Fever
/ Follow-Up Studies
/ Headache
/ Health aspects
/ Hospitals
/ Human diseases
/ Humans
/ Immunity
/ Immunology
/ Infections
/ Infectious Diseases
/ Malaria
/ Malaria - epidemiology
/ Malaria - pathology
/ Microbiology
/ Midwifery
/ Mothers
/ Newborn babies
/ Parasitology
/ Pregnancy
/ Pregnancy Complications, Infectious - epidemiology
/ Pregnancy Complications, Infectious - pathology
/ Pregnancy, Complications of
/ Pregnant women
/ Prevention
/ Prospective Studies
/ Public Health
/ Risk factors
/ Rural Population
/ Studies
/ Symptoms
/ Tropical Medicine
/ Vector-borne diseases
/ Women
/ Womens health
2011
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Malaria associated symptoms in pregnant women followed-up in Benin
by
Massougbodji, Achille
, Borgella, Sophie
, Deloron, Philippe
, Huynh, Bich-Tram
, Gbaguidi, Gildas
, Fievet, Nadine
, Mévo, Blaise Guézo
, Cot, Michel
in
Adult
/ Benin - epidemiology
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedicine
/ Blood pressure
/ Care and treatment
/ Clinics
/ Cohort Studies
/ Cohorts
/ Complications and side effects
/ Diagnosis
/ Entomology
/ Female
/ Fever
/ Follow-Up Studies
/ Headache
/ Health aspects
/ Hospitals
/ Human diseases
/ Humans
/ Immunity
/ Immunology
/ Infections
/ Infectious Diseases
/ Malaria
/ Malaria - epidemiology
/ Malaria - pathology
/ Microbiology
/ Midwifery
/ Mothers
/ Newborn babies
/ Parasitology
/ Pregnancy
/ Pregnancy Complications, Infectious - epidemiology
/ Pregnancy Complications, Infectious - pathology
/ Pregnancy, Complications of
/ Pregnant women
/ Prevention
/ Prospective Studies
/ Public Health
/ Risk factors
/ Rural Population
/ Studies
/ Symptoms
/ Tropical Medicine
/ Vector-borne diseases
/ Women
/ Womens health
2011
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Malaria associated symptoms in pregnant women followed-up in Benin
Journal Article
Malaria associated symptoms in pregnant women followed-up in Benin
2011
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Overview
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.
Methods
A prospective cohort of women followed monthly during pregnancy was conducted in three rural dispensaries in Benin from August 2008 to September 2010. The presence of symptoms suggestive of malaria infection in 982 women during antenatal visits (ANV), unscheduled visits and delivery were analysed. A multivariate logistic regression was used to determine the association between symptoms and a positive thick blood smear (TBS).
Results
During routine ANVs, headache was the only symptom associated with a higher risk of positive TBS (aOR = 1.9; p < 0.001). On the occasion of unscheduled visits, fever (aOR = 5.2; p < 0.001), headache (aOR = 2.1; p = 0.004) and shivering (aOR = 3.1; p < 0.001) were significantly associated with a malaria infection and almost 90% of infected women presented at least one of these symptoms. Two thirds of symptomatic malaria infections during unscheduled visits occurred in late pregnancy and long after the last intermittent preventive treatment dose (IPTp).
Conclusion
The majority of pregnant women were symptomless during routine visits when infected with malaria in an endemic stable area. The only suggestive sign of malaria (fever) was associated with malaria only on the occasion of unscheduled visits. The prevention of malaria in pregnancy could be improved by reassessing the design of IPTp, i.e. by determining an optimal number of doses and time of administration of anti-malarial drugs.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,Springer Nature B.V,BMC
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