Revista do Instituto de Medicina Tropical de São Paulo (Apr 2002)

No evidence of vertical transmission of HTLV-I in bottle-fed children

  • Achiléa L BITTENCOURT,
  • Ester C. SABINO,
  • Maria Cecília COSTA,
  • Celia PEDROSO,
  • Licia MOREIRA

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 44, no. 2
pp. 63 – 65

Abstract

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The most frequent pathway of vertical transmission of HTLV-I is breast-feeding, however bottle fed children may also become infected in a frequency varying from 4 to 14%. In these children the most probable routes of infection are transplacental or contamination in the birth canal. Forty-one bottle-fed children of HTLV-I seropositive mothers in ages varying from three to 39 months (average age of 11 months) were submitted to nested polymerase chain reaction analysis (pol and tax genes). 81.5% of the children were born by an elective cesarean section. No case of infection was detected. The absence of HTLV-I infection in these cases indicates that transmission by transplacental route may be very infrequent.

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