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  • Title: Picornavirus infection in early murine gestation: significance of maternal illness.
    Author: Abzug MJ, Tyson RW.
    Journal: Placenta; 2000 Nov; 21(8):840-6. PubMed ID: 11095934.
    Abstract:
    To evaluate whether maternal illness following picornavirus infection during pregnancy adversely affects placental and fetal health, mice were inoculated with the GDVII strain of Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus or control cell lysate during days 4-7 of gestation. Gross appearance, histopathology and viral culture, and in situ hybridization positivity of placentae and fetuses from ill GDVII-infected, healthy GDVII-infected and control mice were compared. Twenty of 34 (59 per cent) GDVII-infected dams became clinically ill. More placenta-fetus pairs from ill mice were grossly abnormal (68 per cent) than from well GDVII-infected (51 per cent;P< 0.01) or control mice (9 per cent;P< 0.001). Virus was detected by in situ hybridization in 73 per cent of placentae and 29 per cent of fetuses from sick GDVII-infected dams, and in 85 per cent of placentae and 19 per cent of fetuses from healthy GDVII-infected mice (differences not significant). Histological abnormalities consisting of necrosis or an increase in hyaline tissue in the vascular labyrinth layer were similarly frequent in placentae from ill and well GDVII-infected mice (58 per cent versus 67 per cent, P=0.5). Viral RNA, inflammation and necrosis were evident in the heart, great vessels, brain and spinal cord of GDVII-infected fetuses. Infection with GDVII in early pregnancy produces a high rate of gross placental and fetal abnormalities. The rate of gross abnormalities exceeds the incidence of fetal infection and more closely parallels the rates of infection and histopathology in the placenta, suggesting that much of the damage to placenta-fetus pairs is a consequence of placental infection. In addition, the occurrence of viral-induced maternal illness is associated with additive risk to placental and fetal health not explained by an increased rate of placental or fetal infection.
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