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JAMA. 1933;101(3):195-198. doi: 10.1001/jama.1933.02740280015007

ACUTE EPIDEMIC POLIOMYELITIS COMPLICATING PREGNANCY

  1. M. BERNARD BRAHDY, M.D.;
  2. MAURICE LENARSKY, M.D.
  1. MOUNT VERNON, N. Y.; Associate Attending Physician and Resident Physician, Respectively, Willard Parker Hospital, New York NEW YORK
  2. From the Willard Parker Hospital Department of Hospitals and the Department of Pediatrics, Cornell University Medical College.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text.

Excerpt

The occurrence of epidemic poliomyelitis during pregnancy raises several questions. How often does it occur? Should the patient go to term and, if she does, what will be the effect on the labor? Will a viable infant be born? If so, what are the probabilities of intra-uterine infection?

There is no unanimity of opinion as to the frequency of poliomyelitis occurring during pregnancy, nor as to the susceptibility of gravid women to the disease. Aycock1 believes that poliomyelitis occurs more frequently in the latter part of pregnancy than would normally be expected if the condition had not predisposed to the disease. Jungeblut and Engle2 state that early pregnancy and early infancy are the high-water marks of natural resistance to poliomyelitis. The same authors examined the blood of ten women at various stages of pregnancy and found an apparently higher individual virucidal titer than is commonly found in normal

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