2015
DOI: 10.3109/1040841x.2014.954522
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Normal flora and bacterial vaginosis in pregnancy: an overview

Abstract: The female genital tract is an intricate, yet balanced ecosystem that hosts a variety of different residential microflora. The physiological changes that occur during pregnancy may disrupt this balanced ecosystem and predispose women to a potentially pathogenic microbiota. Bacteria that are associated with bacterial vaginosis (BV) are opportunistic pathogens that frequently form part of this microbiota. The overgrowth of and infections with these bacteria are linked to poor obstetric outcomes and increased tra… Show more

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Cited by 32 publications
(34 citation statements)
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References 143 publications
(187 reference statements)
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“…Exposure to these insults leads to a less diverse infant gut microbiome, with relatively higher numbers of pathogenic bacteria being present (Chernikova et al, ). Infections during pregnancy are well known to interrupt normal gestation by both altering the vaginal flora as in bacterial vaginosis, or by increasing susceptibilities for other infections that could alter both maternal and infant microbiomes (Redelinghuys et al, ). Other prenatal factors of importance include antibiotics and prenatal steroids.…”
Section: Part Imentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Exposure to these insults leads to a less diverse infant gut microbiome, with relatively higher numbers of pathogenic bacteria being present (Chernikova et al, ). Infections during pregnancy are well known to interrupt normal gestation by both altering the vaginal flora as in bacterial vaginosis, or by increasing susceptibilities for other infections that could alter both maternal and infant microbiomes (Redelinghuys et al, ). Other prenatal factors of importance include antibiotics and prenatal steroids.…”
Section: Part Imentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lactobacilli-dominance and low pH of the human vaginal microbiome are hypothesized to benefit women by reducing disease risk (reviewed in Brotman, 2011; Graver and Wade, 2011; O'Hanlon et al, 2011; Gong et al, 2014; Nunn et al, 2015). Furthermore, the loss of lactobacilli-dominance is linked to bacterial vaginosis (BV), which is associated with an overgrowth of anaerobic bacteria, relatively high vaginal pH (>4.5; Aldunate et al, 2015), infertility, preterm birth, maternal infections, and increased risk of sexually transmitted diseases (Cherpes et al, 2003; Leitich et al, 2003; Atashili et al, 2008; Brotman et al, 2010; van Oostrum et al, 2013; DiGiulio et al, 2015; Redelinghuys et al, 2016). The fact that the human vaginal microbiome appears to be unique among mammals raises key questions about why humans are different: Do humans have a distinct reproductive physiology or experience different or stronger forces of selection compared to other mammals?…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As the prevalence of preterm births is increasing there is a need to find out all possible risk factors so that timely measures can be taken to prevent women delivering a preterm baby. Pregnancy itself is known to alter the vaginal flora and predisposes to BV which many at times goes undetected because many women are asymptomatic [14]. Our study reports a strong association of BV with preterm birth and the condition is very easy to treat by antibiotics, hospital protocols should screen all pregnant women early in pregnancy to prevent preterm birth.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 65%