Image optimize LCP
  • Add description, images, menus and links to your mega menu

  • A column with no settings can be used as a spacer

  • Link to your collections, sales and even external links

  • Add up to five columns

  • décembre 05, 2016 2 lire la lecture

    In this short blog post we draw attention to schistosomiasis and its links to premature birth, in recognition of World Prematurity Day.

    Researchers at Brown University in the United States are looking at schistosomiasis and its effects on pregnant women in Leyte, a community in the Philippines. As a quick reminder for those who have not been following our growing interest in this insidious fluke, schistosomiasis is a water-borne parasite that wreaks havoc on internal organs, depending upon its strain.

    Schisto-h affects the reproductive organs, while schisto-j affects the liver and is perhaps the most insidious. Though the effects of schistosomiasis have been studied for years, intense examination of its health effects on mother and fetus during pregnancy have somehow been neglected in much research until recently.

    Friedman and Kurtis and their team are finding a link between schisto-j, placental inflammation and adverse birth outcomes, including prematurity in the population in Leyte, Philippines. Mothers who have schistosomiasis-j have higher levels of endotoxemia (1.3 times in maternal blood, 2.4 times higher in the placenta). Endotoxins are in turn, associated with prematurity. The Brown team has found that in pregnancy, schisto-j eggs also have proinflammatory response, also associated with prematurity and other adverse pregnancy events including intrauterine growth restriction and low birthweight.

    Put in layman's terms, the schistosomiasis eggs cause a chronic infection and a long-term inflammatory response which is linked to problems in the placenta as well as in the maternal bloodstream.

    But how big a problem is it potentially? Schistosomiasis affects some 200 million people worlwide, 40 million women of reproductive age. Schisto-j is endemic in countries with huge populations: China, The Philippines and Indonesia. Suffice it to say, that the problem is large and further exploration of the troublesome fluke in all its forms is important for women's health and for the prevention of prematurity.

     

    Laisser un commentaire

    Les commentaires sont approuvés avant leur publication.


    Voir l'article entier

    Pumani bubble CPAP for respiratory distress syndrome in children 1 to 59 months; SDG3; innovation
    Pumani bubble CPAP

    novembre 11, 2025 1 lire la lecture

    The Pumani bubble CPAP was engineered by a team at Rice University in Texas, working in collaboration with clinicians in Malawi.  A range of specific design considerations made the Pumani especially appropriate for low-resource settings so that parts are easy to replace. 

    Voir l'article entier
    E-MOTIVE follow up estimation of postpartum blood loss with a tray called the MaternaWell
    The MaternaWell Tray for PPH estimation now appears in key obstetric guidelines

    octobre 30, 2025 1 lire la lecture

    Voir l'article entier
    neonatal health and preterm separation of mother and infant as compared to skin to skin (STS) and Kangaroo Mother Care
    Is it ethical to separate mother and infant just after birth?

    octobre 28, 2025 2 lire la lecture

    Immediate skin to skin care means less than ten minutes after the infant takes its first breath, the infant, naked except for a diaper, spends at least one hour on the mother’s chest, against her skin.  It is recommended that preterm and low birth weight kangaroo care involve prolonging contact beyond the first hour for at least 8 hours per day or as long as possible (up to 24 hours) per day

     

    Voir l'article entier