Spontaneous Abortion in Pregnancies Having COVID-19 Infection in Bangladesh: A Series of Cases

Das, Tripti Rani and Alam, M. Jahangir and Mariana, Nafisa Anwar and Akter, Nazma and Rahman, Md. Mostafizur and Choudhury, Tasrina Rabia and Chowdhury, Tanzina Iveen (2021) Spontaneous Abortion in Pregnancies Having COVID-19 Infection in Bangladesh: A Series of Cases. Journal of Advances in Medicine and Medical Research, 33 (24). pp. 150-157. ISSN 2456-8899

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Abstract

Background: Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) is a highly contagious disease and spreading all over the world. Pregnant women are particularly vulnerable to this infectious disease. There are not many reports on missed-abortion or stillbirths in COVID-19 that affected pregnant women. Twelve cases are presented here among a few cases of spontaneous abortion or fetal demise without having remarkable cause other than laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 (RT-PCR) from March 2020 to July 2020 in a single medical university hospital in Bangladesh.

Cases: Enrolled 12 pregnant subjects of fetal demise ≥11 weeks of gestation had COVID-19 infection (RT-PCR) and the specimen taken was nasal swab. 10 patients were admitted to the hospital and 2 patients were managed in their home under the supervision of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University (BSMMU). We excluded all the possible causes of clinical and obstetric causes of abortion other than COVID-19 infection. However, most of them were asymptomatic COVID-19 infection carriers, and only had a history of low-grade fever. 5 cases had a history of medical disorder which were controlled before pregnancy.

Conclusion: All the 12 cases did not have any clinical and obstetric disorder during pregnancy, but they all had COVID-19 infection. This suggests COVID-19 infection might induce fetal death through possible inflammation in the placenta.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Impact Archive > Medical Science
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 12 Nov 2022 07:21
Last Modified: 03 Jan 2024 06:26
URI: http://research.sdpublishers.net/id/eprint/140

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