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. 1986 Sep 15;135(6):618-23.

Congenital toxoplasmosis: epidemiologic features and control

Congenital toxoplasmosis: epidemiologic features and control

A O Carter et al. CMAJ. .

Abstract

Toxoplasmosis is caused by the parasite Toxoplasma gondii. It is acquired from undercooked meat or from food or fomites contaminated by cat feces. The disease can be transmitted to the fetus only during maternal parasitemia, which is associated with primary infection. Extrapolation from current data suggests that there are 140 to 1400 cases of congenital toxoplasmosis per year in Canada and that 70 to 280 of the infants are severely affected at birth; many of the others suffer sequelae later in life. Serologic diagnosis of primary infection in the mother is quite sensitive and specific. Diagnosis in the infant is more difficult and may take several months. Prenatal treatment of the woman and postnatal treatment of the infant are hampered by the lack of proven efficacy as well as ethical and compliance problems. Preventive serologic screening and prophylaxis have the same drawbacks. Educating young women to avoid infection is an inexpensive, low-risk intervention that would be the preferred preventive strategy if it could be shown to be effective. Immunization may prove to be the most cost-effective method of preventing congenital toxoplasmosis if a safe and effective vaccine is developed.

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