妊娠期梅毒的识别与治疗。

Medscape women's health Pub Date : 1998-01-01
J A Larkin, L Lit, J Toney, J A Haley
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引用次数: 0

摘要

20世纪80年代末和90年代初,由于非法使用毒品和以毒品交换性行为,年轻妇女的初级和二级梅毒病例急剧增加。在患有原发性或继发性梅毒的母亲所生的婴儿中,高达50%的婴儿会早产、死产或在新生儿期死亡;此外,这些孩子大多患有先天性疾病,可能多年后才会显现出来。虽然对孕妇的适当治疗可以预防先天性梅毒,但主要的障碍是无法有效地识别这些妇女并使她们接受治疗。在确定青霉素治疗方案时,临床医生必须考虑母体感染的阶段、胎儿接触时间的长短以及妊娠期间可能影响抗生素药代动力学的生理变化。对于青霉素过敏或感染艾滋病毒的患者,治疗决定可能会更加复杂。先天性梅毒的发病机制尚不完全清楚,但胎盘侵入被认为是主要途径。所有妇女应在妊娠早期用非螺旋体试验(如快速血浆反应素[RPR]或性病研究实验室[VDRL]试验)筛查梅毒。高危人群应在28周及临近分娩时再次检测。即使在怀孕期间对梅毒进行适当治疗,胎儿感染仍可能在高达14%的病例中发生。由于生理变化会改变药物水平,而且药物有诱发子宫收缩或损害胎儿健康的风险,因此在怀孕期间治疗梅毒可能很困难。虽然有额外的风险和潜在的并发症,但治疗方案与未怀孕妇女相似。
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Recognizing and treating syphilis in pregnancy.

The number of primary and secondary syphilis cases in young women rose dramatically in the late 1980s and early 1990s, due to illicit drug use and the exchange of drugs for sex. Of infants born to mothers with primary or secondary syphilis, up to 50% will be premature, stillborn, or die in the neonatal period; further, most of these children are born with congenital disease that may not be apparent for years. While appropriate treatment of the pregnant female can prevent congenital syphilis, the major deterrent has been the inability to effectively identify these women and get them to undergo treatment. In determining a penicillin regimen, the clinician must consider the stage of maternal infection, the length of fetal exposure, and physiologic changes in pregnancy that can affect the pharmacokinetics of antibiotics. Treatment decisions may be further complicated in patients who are allergic to penicillin or infected with HIV. The pathogenesis of congenital syphilis is not completely understood, but placental invasion is the presumed major route. All women should be screened for syphilis with a nontreponemal test (eg, rapid plasma reagin [RPR] or venereal disease research laboratory [VDRL] test) in the first trimester. Those at high risk should be retested at 28 weeks and near delivery. Even with appropriate treatment of syphilis during pregnancy, fetal infection may still occur in up to 14% of cases. Treating syphilis during pregnancy can be difficult due to physiologic changes that can alter drug levels and the risk that drugs will induce uterine contractions or compromise the health of the fetus. While there are added risks and potential complications, treatment regimens parallel those in nonpregnant women.

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