European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology
Volume 147, Issue 1 , Pages 29-32, November 2009

Maternal and foetal consequences of dengue fever during pregnancy

Department of Obstetrics Gynaecology, Franck Joly Hospital, Saint Laurent du Maroni, French Guiana

Received 24 November 2008; received in revised form 27 April 2009; accepted 30 June 2009. published online 21 July 2009.

Abstract 

Objective

The aim of the study was to assess the maternal and foetal consequences of dengue fever infection during pregnancy.

Study design

A retrospective study was carried out from 1 January 1992 to 10 September 2006 on 53 pregnant women infected with the dengue virus during pregnancy. The women were patients of the obstetrics and gynaecology department of Saint Laurent du Maroni hospital. A dengue infection was confirmed either by the presence of specific IgMs or by isolation of the virus (PCR or culture). The data collected related to obstetric and foetal consequences both during pregnancy and at birth, as well as the effect on the newborn.

The risk of maternal–foetal transmission was assessed from 20 samples of blood taken from the umbilical cord at birth.

Results

The principal maternal consequences were: premature labour (41%), premature birth (9.6%), haemorrhage during labour (9.3%: 5 cases) and retroplacental haematoma (1.9%: 1 case).

Foetal consequences were: prematurity (20%), foetal death in utero (3.8%: 2 cases), late miscarriage (3.8%: 2 cases), acute foetal distress during labour (7.5%: 4 cases), maternal–foetal transmission (5.6%: 3 cases) and neonatal death (1.9%: 1 case).

Conclusions

Maternal infection with the dengue virus during pregnancy represents a real risk of premature birth.

There is also a risk of haemorrhage both for the mother and the baby when infection occurs near term.

Keywords: Dengue fever, Pregnancy, Haemorrhage, Materno-fetal transmission

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PII: S0301-2115(09)00434-5

doi:10.1016/j.ejogrb.2009.06.028

European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology
Volume 147, Issue 1 , Pages 29-32, November 2009