213
III International Scientific and Practical Conference
THE INCIDENCE OF TORCH (TOXOPLASMOSIS, OTHER INFECTIONS,
RUBELLA, CYTOMEGALOVIRUS INFECTION, HERPES) - INFECTION
AND ITS EFFECT ON THE SEVERITY OF CHRONIC LUNG DISEASE IN
CHILDREN
Saydalikhujaeva Sh.Kh., Rikhsikhujaev A.Kh., Matchonov D.O.
Tashkent state dental institute
Relevance of the study:
In TORCH - complex include: T - toxoplasmosis, O -
other infections, R - rubella, C - cytomegalovirus infection, H - herpes. WHO has
recently expanded this list, add to the group of "other infection" HIV, hepatitis B and
C, chlamydia. During pregnancy, primary infection with any of the TORCH group is
dangerous. That is, a meeting with the infection to which immunity has not been
developed. The presence of an infection in a pregnant woman can provoke
termination of pregnancy at any time. It is also important to know that the risk of
developing fetal pathology is higher in acute infection than in chronic infection. Most
of the TORCH infections cause mild maternal morbidity, but have serious fetal
consequences, and treatment of maternal infection frequently has no impact on fetal
outcome. Therefore, recognition of maternal disease and fetal monitoring once
disease is recognized are important for all clinicians. Knowledge of these diseases
will help the clinician appropriately counsel mothers on preventive measures to avoid
these infections, and will aid in counseling parents on the potential for adverse fetal
outcomes when these infections are present.
Objective:
To analyze the incidence of chronic TORCH infection and its effect
on the severity of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)in childhood and
early adolescence.
Materials and Methods.
In pediatric pulmonology department in 1-clinic of
Tashkent Medical Academy for the period for the period from September 2018 to
March 2020 obtained conservative treatment 744 patients with COPD. In screening
for TORCH-infection were analyzed using blood tests ImmunoComb for the presence
of antibodies IgM, IgA, IgG class to the corresponding pathogen. For more accurate
the stage of disease was analyzed paired serum. TORCH - infections identified in 46
children, which amounted to 6.1%. Males were 28 (60.8%), female - 18 (39.2%) with
a mean age of patients was 3 ± 1,1 year.
Results
. In the history in 24 (57.2%) children, chronic TORCH - infection was
detected earlier by screening study at the time of the mother's pregnancy. The
remaining 18 chronic infections was detected for the first time. In the structure of
TORCH - infections accounted for cytomegalovirus - 22 (47.8%), the second
occurrence of nosology was chlamydia in 10 cases, accounting for 23.8% and 19% of
cases, herpes simplex virus 2 (8 patients) and 6 rubella cases (14.3%). An interesting
fact is that in patients with congenital TORCH - infection during aggravation of
COPD, showed pronounced than in cases without concomitant TORCH - infection.
This was expressed in a later therapeutic response to ongoing conservative therapy, as
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |