Fetal death from ascending bacterial infection. Diagnostic method, a narrative review. Why is the method that includes placental study, evaluation of clinical and laboratory data efficient in identifying ascending bacterial infection as the cause of fetal death?
Published 2021-07-09
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Copyright (c) 2021 Alfredo Ovalle Salas, Elena Kakarieka Weisskopf

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Abstract
This narrative review includes published studies of stillbirth classification methods and their efficiency in identifying ascending bacterial infection (ABI), as a cause of fetal death (FD), by searching PubMed, Cochrane, Embase, ScienceDirect, Wiley Online Library, Scielo. Many children die before birth around the world and it has not been possible to reduce FD because the methods used have not been adequate and because ABI, the most frequent cause of FD in a public hospital in Chile, is not diagnosed. Systems using clinical, laboratory and placental study data, INCODE, CORM, are more efficient in identifying ABI as the origin of FD. Specific markers of
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infection/placental inflammation, histologic chorioamnionitis/acute funitis have been shown to be more efficient in diagnosing ABI than fetal autopsy, that amniotic fluid culture is more efficient than placental culture for detect microbial invasion of the amniotic cavity and that the cord blood sample is efficient for the etiological diagnosis of the infection. The knowledge of the IBA as the initial cause of MF helps to develop guidelines and norms for preventing FD due to this condition.