Early Path Medical Consultation Services
Pathology Services Working for Safer Pregnancies

Glossary of Terms Frequently Asked Questions How to arrange a consultation What is Perinatal Pathology?

Antiphospholipids and Anticardiolipins

Blighted Ovum

Cervix

Chromosome Counts

Chromosonal Error

Clomid

Cord Accidents

Cytogenetics

D&C vs. Natural Miscarriage

HCG (Human Chorionic Gonadotropin)

Infections

Miscarriage Diagnosis

Perinatal Pathology & Maternal Disease

Ruptured Membranes

Thrombophilia

Tissue Studies

Trying Again

Frequently Asked Questions - Infections

Infections

Acute infections in pregnancy most commonly refer to bacterial infections. These most commonly arise from the vagina and cross the cervix. For this reason acute infection in commonly also called "ascending infection."

The majority of cases of acute infection that lead to pregnancy loss cause no symptoms in the mother and can only be diagnosed as a cause of loss by examination of the membranes, umbilical cord and placenta under a microscope. Most women and, unfortunately, many obstetricians are not aware that infections can also cause what the doctor "mistakenly" diagnoses as incompetent cervix as well as preterm membrane rupture, uterine contractions and preterm labor. Less commonly the baby can die in utero without much in the way of maternal symptoms at all.

It is very common in cases where a doctor thinks that there is painless cervical dilatation and, therefore, the possibility of an incompetent cervix, that under the microscope I will see evidence of a protracted, long-standing, days old acute inflammation. Infection can weaken and soften connective tissue; a soft cervix may be judged clinically "incompetent" if the doctor does not get the information that an infection was present. If your doctor didn't realize that one of the things that accompanied your cervical dilatation was a longstanding significant infection he may have just stitched you shut and never known he needed to treat an infection. However, if the cervix is opening because it's inflammed by an infection all the stitching in the world isn't going to keep it shut.

It's important to realize that when you get pregnant again that infection won't necessarily be gone. Many infections--whether they are bacteria, yeast, mycoplasma or ureaplasma--are passed back and forth between partners. At the time of testing, some can be present in one partner and not the other. (Unfortunately, when doing a recurrent pregnancy loss workup many obstetricians test only the mother for infection and not the father, thereby missing one source of infection.) If examination of your slides or tissue reveals significant infection in the pregnancy you lost, make sure both you and your partner are treated. When you become pregnant again make sure that you are monitored for future infection.

Some patients wonder why their doctors don't just prescribe antibiotics prophylactically. Physicians are concerned about resistant organisms coming from protracted use of antibiotics. We really feel that clinical monitoring and judgement are extremely important rather than just a chronic snarfing of antibiotics.

 


DISCLAIMER: This communication is for educational purposes only and it is not to be used as a substitute for a consultation with your physician. Should you contact Dr. Salafia's office, any responses to you will be based on the information you provide and no attempt will be made to confirm or verify any such information, including any laboratory data you may submit. Questions regarding actual symptoms of illness or health conditions should be addressed to a local health care practitioner who can physically examine and take responsibility for your care throughout the course of your condition/illness, which Dr. Salafia, being a physician licensed to practice medicine only in the State of New York, cannot and will not do. You should NOT use this information to diagnose or treat a health problem; rather, you should consult a qualified health care provider who examines you in person and who is licensed to practice in the state where you are located.

Copyright © 2000-2004 EarlyPath. All rights reserved.