1. Bacteria in the amniotic fluid without inflammation: early colonization vs. contamination.
- Author
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Jung, Eunjung, Romero, Roberto, Yoon, Bo Hyun, Theis, Kevin R., Gudicha, Dereje W., Tarca, Adi L., Diaz-Primera, Ramiro, Winters, Andrew D., Gomez-Lopez, Nardhy, Yeo, Lami, and Hsu, Chaur-Dong
- Subjects
NUCLEIC acid analysis ,INTERLEUKINS ,AMNIOCENTESIS ,INFLAMMATION ,CROSS-sectional method ,AMNIOTIC liquid ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,FETAL diseases ,MASS spectrometry ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,POLYMERASE chain reaction ,BACTERIA ,PREMATURE labor - Abstract
Intra-amniotic infection, defined by the presence of microorganisms in the amniotic cavity, is often accompanied by intra-amniotic inflammation. Occasionally, laboratories report the growth of bacteria or the presence of microbial nucleic acids in amniotic fluid in the absence of intra-amniotic inflammation. This study was conducted to determine the clinical significance of the presence of bacteria in amniotic fluid samples in the absence of intra-amniotic inflammation. A retrospective cross-sectional study included 360 patients with preterm labor and intact membranes who underwent transabdominal amniocentesis for evaluation of the microbial state of the amniotic cavity as well as intra-amniotic inflammation. Cultivation techniques were used to isolate microorganisms, and broad-range polymerase chain reaction coupled with electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (PCR/ESI-MS) was utilized to detect the nucleic acids of bacteria, viruses, and fungi. Patients whose amniotic fluid samples evinced microorganisms but did not indicate inflammation had a similar perinatal outcome to those without microorganisms or inflammation [amniocentesis-to-delivery interval (p=0.31), spontaneous preterm birth before 34 weeks (p=0.83), acute placental inflammatory lesions (p=1), and composite neonatal morbidity (p=0.8)]. The isolation of microorganisms from a sample of amniotic fluid in the absence of intra-amniotic inflammation is indicative of a benign condition, which most likely represents contamination of the specimen during the collection procedure or laboratory processing rather than early colonization or infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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