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Generation of a malaria negative Ugandan birth weight standard for the diagnosis of small for gestational age.
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- المؤلفون: Zakama, Arthurine K; Zakama, Arthurine K; Weekes, Terik; Kajubi, Richard; Kakuru, Abel; Ategeka, John; Kamya, Moses; Muhindo, Mary K; Havlir, Diane; Jagannathan, Prasanna; Dorsey, Grant; Gaw, Stephanie L
- المصدر:
PloS one; vol 15, iss 10, e0240157; 1932-6203
- نوع التسجيلة:
Electronic Resource
- الدخول الالكتروني :
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/21d5w2ct
https://escholarship.org/
- معلومة اضافية
- Publisher Information:
eScholarship, University of California 2020-01-01
- نبذة مختصرة :
ObjectivePlacental malaria is a known risk factor for small for gestational age (SGA) neonates. However, currently utilized international and African birthweight standards have not controlled for placental malaria and/or lack obstetrical ultrasound dating. We developed a neonatal birthweight standard based on obstetrically dated pregnancies that excluded individuals with clinical malaria, asymptomatic parasitemia, and placental malaria infection. We hypothesized that current curves underestimate true ideal birthweight and the prevalence of SGA.Study designParticipants were pooled from two double-blind randomized control trials of intermittent preventive therapy during pregnancy in Uganda. HIV-negative women without comorbidities were enrolled from 12-20 weeks gestation. Gestational age was confirmed by ultrasound dating. Women were followed through pregnancy and delivery for clinical malaria, asymptomatic parasitemia, and placental malaria. Women without malaria, asymptomatic parasitemia, or placental malaria formed the malaria negative cohort and generated the Ugandan birthweight standard. The Ugandan standard was then used to estimate the prevalence of SGA neonates in the malaria positive cohort. These findings were compared to international (Williams, World Health Organization (WHO), and INTERGROWTH-21st) and regional standards (Tanzanian and Malawi).Results926 women had complete delivery data; 393 (42.4%) met criteria for the malaria negative cohort and 533 (57.6%) were malaria positive. The Ugandan standard diagnosed SGA in 17.1% of malaria positive neonates; similar to the INTERGROWTH-21st and Schmiegelow curves. The WHO curve diagnosed SGA in significantly more neonates (32.1%, p = <0.001), and the Malawi curve diagnosed SGA in significantly fewer neonates (8.3%, p <0.001).ConclusionExclusion of women with subclinical placental malaria in malaria-endemic areas created birth weight norms at higher values and increased the detection of SGA. Birth weight s
- الموضوع:
- Availability:
Open access content. Open access content
public
- Note:
application/pdf
PloS one vol 15, iss 10, e0240157 1932-6203
- Other Numbers:
CDLER oai:escholarship.org:ark:/13030/qt21d5w2ct
qt21d5w2ct
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/21d5w2ct
https://escholarship.org/
1287340179
- Contributing Source:
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- الرقم المعرف:
edsoai.on1287340179
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