Primary cytomegalovirus infection in pregnant women of different socioeconomic status Primoinfección por citomegalovírus en embarazadas de diferente condicion socioeconomica.
Author
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Suárez,
Author
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Briones,
Author
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Luchsinger,
Author
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Schultz,
Author
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Peña,
Author
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de Diego,
Author
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Grunberg,
Admission date
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2019-01-29T15:50:03Z
Available date
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2019-01-29T15:50:03Z
Publication date
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1994
Cita de ítem
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Revista medica de Chile, Volumen 122, Issue 10, 2018, Pages 1153-1157
Identifier
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00349887
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/162537
Abstract
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Cytomegalovirus infection is the first cause of viral congenital infections. We studied the incidence of primary cytomegalovirus infection, searching for the presence of antibodies with an ELISA technique, in 939 pregnant women of a low socioeconomic level, attending a public outpatient clinic and 123 pregnant university students, attending a special outpatient clinic for students. The initially seronegative women were tested again during the second and third trimester of pregnancy to identify primary infections. The presence of cytomegalovirus congenital infection in the newborns of infected mothers was investigated isolating the virus in cell cultures from urine samples. There was a higher prevalence of infection among low socioeconomic status women (95 vs 69.9%). Two women (one student and one coming from a low socioeconomic status) had a primary infection and in the newborn of the student, a congenital cytomegalovirus infection was detected. It is concluded that women's socioeconom
Primary cytomegalovirus infection in pregnant women of different socioeconomic status Primoinfección por citomegalovírus en embarazadas de diferente condicion socioeconomica.