Carter A O, Frank J W
CMAJ. 1986 Sep 15;135(6):618-23.
Toxoplasmosis is caused by the parasite Toxoplasma gondii. It is acquired from undercooked meat or from food or fomites contaminated by cat feces. The disease can be transmitted to the fetus only during maternal parasitemia, which is associated with primary infection. Extrapolation from current data suggests that there are 140 to 1400 cases of congenital toxoplasmosis per year in Canada and that 70 to 280 of the infants are severely affected at birth; many of the others suffer sequelae later in life. Serologic diagnosis of primary infection in the mother is quite sensitive and specific. Diagnosis in the infant is more difficult and may take several months. Prenatal treatment of the woman and postnatal treatment of the infant are hampered by the lack of proven efficacy as well as ethical and compliance problems. Preventive serologic screening and prophylaxis have the same drawbacks. Educating young women to avoid infection is an inexpensive, low-risk intervention that would be the preferred preventive strategy if it could be shown to be effective. Immunization may prove to be the most cost-effective method of preventing congenital toxoplasmosis if a safe and effective vaccine is developed.
弓形虫病由寄生虫刚地弓形虫引起。它通过食用未煮熟的肉类或被猫粪污染的食物或污染物而感染。该疾病仅在母体寄生虫血症期间可传染给胎儿,这与原发性感染有关。根据现有数据推断,加拿大每年有140至1400例先天性弓形虫病病例,其中70至280名婴儿出生时受到严重影响;其他许多婴儿在以后的生活中会出现后遗症。母亲原发性感染的血清学诊断相当敏感且特异。婴儿的诊断则更为困难,可能需要数月时间。由于缺乏已证实的疗效以及伦理和依从性问题,对孕妇的产前治疗和对婴儿的产后治疗都受到阻碍。预防性血清学筛查和预防也有同样的缺点。教育年轻女性避免感染是一种低成本、低风险的干预措施,如果能证明其有效,将是首选的预防策略。如果开发出安全有效的疫苗,免疫接种可能被证明是预防先天性弓形虫病最具成本效益的方法。