Risk factors for Toxoplasma gondii infection in women of childbearing age

OBJECTIVES: Determine the risk factors involved in toxoplasmosis transmission and determine whether pregnancy is a risk factor for toxoplasmosis infection. STUDY DESIGN: Cross-sectional study carried out on 2,242 women at childbearing age. An indirect immunofluorescence reaction was used to identify immunity to Toxoplasma gondii. Previous gestations were also analyzed as a possible risk factor. The results were analyzed by chi2 and OR tests, and by variance analysis. The sample was statistically balanced according to social-economic risk factors. RESULTS: Previously pregnant women were 1.74 times more frequently infected with toxoplasmosis, regardless of environmental conditions. Pregnant women living under unfavorable environmental conditions had an approximately two times increased risk of being infected for each risk factor (contact with host animals, presence of vehicles of oocyst transmission). Previous pregnancy was the risk factor that had the strongest influence on acquiring toxoplasmosis (variance analysis and statistical balancing). DISCUSSION: The prevalence of this zoonosis is high in Goiânia-GO, Brazil (65.8%). Inadequate environmental sanitation was not significantly correlated with toxoplasmosis infection, except when associated with previous pregnancy, showing that the fundamental cause for infection is not environmental. CONCLUSION: The finding that pregnancy makes women more vulnerable to this protozoan, makes it important to implement prophylactic control of at-risk pregnant women.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Avelino,Mariza Martins, Campos Júnior,Dioclécio, Parada,Josetti Barbosa de, Castro,Ana Maria de
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Brazilian Society of Infectious Diseases 2004
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1413-86702004000200007
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id oai:scielo:S1413-86702004000200007
record_format ojs
spelling oai:scielo:S1413-867020040002000072004-09-08Risk factors for Toxoplasma gondii infection in women of childbearing ageAvelino,Mariza MartinsCampos Júnior,DioclécioParada,Josetti Barbosa deCastro,Ana Maria de Toxoplasmosis in pregnancy risk factor host animals means of transmission contaminant elements OBJECTIVES: Determine the risk factors involved in toxoplasmosis transmission and determine whether pregnancy is a risk factor for toxoplasmosis infection. STUDY DESIGN: Cross-sectional study carried out on 2,242 women at childbearing age. An indirect immunofluorescence reaction was used to identify immunity to Toxoplasma gondii. Previous gestations were also analyzed as a possible risk factor. The results were analyzed by chi2 and OR tests, and by variance analysis. The sample was statistically balanced according to social-economic risk factors. RESULTS: Previously pregnant women were 1.74 times more frequently infected with toxoplasmosis, regardless of environmental conditions. Pregnant women living under unfavorable environmental conditions had an approximately two times increased risk of being infected for each risk factor (contact with host animals, presence of vehicles of oocyst transmission). Previous pregnancy was the risk factor that had the strongest influence on acquiring toxoplasmosis (variance analysis and statistical balancing). DISCUSSION: The prevalence of this zoonosis is high in Goiânia-GO, Brazil (65.8%). Inadequate environmental sanitation was not significantly correlated with toxoplasmosis infection, except when associated with previous pregnancy, showing that the fundamental cause for infection is not environmental. CONCLUSION: The finding that pregnancy makes women more vulnerable to this protozoan, makes it important to implement prophylactic control of at-risk pregnant women.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessBrazilian Society of Infectious DiseasesBrazilian Journal of Infectious Diseases v.8 n.2 20042004-04-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1413-86702004000200007en10.1590/S1413-86702004000200007
institution SCIELO
collection OJS
country Brasil
countrycode BR
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-br
tag revista
region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Avelino,Mariza Martins
Campos Júnior,Dioclécio
Parada,Josetti Barbosa de
Castro,Ana Maria de
spellingShingle Avelino,Mariza Martins
Campos Júnior,Dioclécio
Parada,Josetti Barbosa de
Castro,Ana Maria de
Risk factors for Toxoplasma gondii infection in women of childbearing age
author_facet Avelino,Mariza Martins
Campos Júnior,Dioclécio
Parada,Josetti Barbosa de
Castro,Ana Maria de
author_sort Avelino,Mariza Martins
title Risk factors for Toxoplasma gondii infection in women of childbearing age
title_short Risk factors for Toxoplasma gondii infection in women of childbearing age
title_full Risk factors for Toxoplasma gondii infection in women of childbearing age
title_fullStr Risk factors for Toxoplasma gondii infection in women of childbearing age
title_full_unstemmed Risk factors for Toxoplasma gondii infection in women of childbearing age
title_sort risk factors for toxoplasma gondii infection in women of childbearing age
description OBJECTIVES: Determine the risk factors involved in toxoplasmosis transmission and determine whether pregnancy is a risk factor for toxoplasmosis infection. STUDY DESIGN: Cross-sectional study carried out on 2,242 women at childbearing age. An indirect immunofluorescence reaction was used to identify immunity to Toxoplasma gondii. Previous gestations were also analyzed as a possible risk factor. The results were analyzed by chi2 and OR tests, and by variance analysis. The sample was statistically balanced according to social-economic risk factors. RESULTS: Previously pregnant women were 1.74 times more frequently infected with toxoplasmosis, regardless of environmental conditions. Pregnant women living under unfavorable environmental conditions had an approximately two times increased risk of being infected for each risk factor (contact with host animals, presence of vehicles of oocyst transmission). Previous pregnancy was the risk factor that had the strongest influence on acquiring toxoplasmosis (variance analysis and statistical balancing). DISCUSSION: The prevalence of this zoonosis is high in Goiânia-GO, Brazil (65.8%). Inadequate environmental sanitation was not significantly correlated with toxoplasmosis infection, except when associated with previous pregnancy, showing that the fundamental cause for infection is not environmental. CONCLUSION: The finding that pregnancy makes women more vulnerable to this protozoan, makes it important to implement prophylactic control of at-risk pregnant women.
publisher Brazilian Society of Infectious Diseases
publishDate 2004
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1413-86702004000200007
work_keys_str_mv AT avelinomarizamartins riskfactorsfortoxoplasmagondiiinfectioninwomenofchildbearingage
AT camposjuniordioclecio riskfactorsfortoxoplasmagondiiinfectioninwomenofchildbearingage
AT paradajosettibarbosade riskfactorsfortoxoplasmagondiiinfectioninwomenofchildbearingage
AT castroanamariade riskfactorsfortoxoplasmagondiiinfectioninwomenofchildbearingage
_version_ 1756416315933851648