2023
DOI: 10.3390/pathogens12080999
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Screening for Resistant Bacteria, Antimicrobial Resistance Genes, Sexually Transmitted Infections and Schistosoma spp. in Tissue Samples from Predominantly Vaginally Delivered Placentae in Ivory Coast and Ghana

Roman Franz,
Andreas Hahn,
Ralf Matthias Hagen
et al.

Abstract: Medical complications during pregnancy have been frequently reported from Western Africa with a particular importance of infectious complications. Placental tissue can either become the target of infectious agents itself, such as, e.g., in the case of urogenital schistosomiasis, or be subjected to contamination with colonizing or infection-associated microorganisms of the cervix or the vagina during vaginal delivery. In the retrospective cross-sectional assessment presented here, the quantitative dimension of … Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…This seems to be confirmed by the latest findings from Franz et al, who examined 268 placentas of women from Ivory Coast and Ghana with PCR for the presence of Schistosoma spp. and found positive signals in 19% (n=51) of the samples [22]. The latter is in accordance with the earlier reported prevalence of PS of 20% in an endemic population of Ivory Coast by Renaud et al [10] detected by maceration.…”
Section: Underestimated Prevalence Of Placental Schistosomiasis?supporting
confidence: 92%
“…This seems to be confirmed by the latest findings from Franz et al, who examined 268 placentas of women from Ivory Coast and Ghana with PCR for the presence of Schistosoma spp. and found positive signals in 19% (n=51) of the samples [22]. The latter is in accordance with the earlier reported prevalence of PS of 20% in an endemic population of Ivory Coast by Renaud et al [10] detected by maceration.…”
Section: Underestimated Prevalence Of Placental Schistosomiasis?supporting
confidence: 92%
“…This seems to be confirmed by the latest findings from Franz et al, who examined 268 placentas of women from the Ivory Coast and Ghana with PCR for the presence of Schistosoma spp. and found positive signals in 19% ( n = 51) of the samples [ 23 ]. The latter is in accordance with the earlier reported prevalence of PS of 20% in an endemic population of the Ivory Coast by Renaud et al [ 10 ] detected by maceration.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%