Abstract
BackgroundHypertension is an increasing health issue in sub-Saharan Africa where malaria remains common in pregnancy. We established a birth cohort in Nigeria to evaluate the early impact of maternal malaria on newborn blood pressure (BP).MethodsAnthropometric measurements, BP, blood films for malaria parasites and haematocrit were obtained in 436 mother-baby pairs. Women were grouped to distinguish between the timing of malaria parasitaemia as ‘No Malaria’, ‘Malaria during pregnancy only’ or ‘Malaria at delivery’, and parasite density as low (<1000 parasites/µl of blood) and high (≥1000/µl).ResultsPrevalence of maternal malaria parasitaemia was 48%, associated with younger maternal age (p<0.001), being primigravid (p = 0.022), lower haematocrit (p = 0.028). High parasite density through pregnancy had the largest effect on mean birth indices so that weight, length, head and mid-upper arm circumferences were smaller by 300 g, 1.1 cm, 0.7 cm and 0.4 cm respectively compared with ‘No malaria’ (all p≤0.005). In babies of mothers who had ‘malaria at delivery’, their SBPs adjusted for other confounders were lower respectively by 4.3 and 5.7 mmHg/kg compared with ‘malaria during pregnancy only’ or ‘none’. In contrast the mean newborn systolic (SBP) and diastolic BPs (DBP) adjusted for birth weight were higher by 1.7 and 1.4 mmHg/kg respectively in babies whose mothers had high compared with low parasitaemia.ConclusionsAs expected, prenatal malarial exposure had a significant impact on fetal growth rates. Malaria at delivery was associated with the lowest newborn BPs while malaria through pregnancy, which may attenuate growth of the vascular network, generated higher newborn BPs adjusted for size. These neonatal findings have potential implications for cardiovascular health in sub-Saharan Africa.
Highlights
Hypertension is a public health and economic problem in Sub-Saharan Africa with a prevalence up to 33% in urban areas in Nigeria [1,2]
GA – Gestational Age; SBP- Systolic blood pressure; diastolic BPs (DBP)- Diastolic blood pressure. *Malarial timing: Coding 0 = No Malaria- Reference category 1 = malaria in pregnancy, 2 = malaria at delivery ± pregnancy. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0024548.t007. For those women reporting the use of preventive measures against malaria, including the 53% who said they used chemoprophylactic drugs, there was no difference in malaria parasitaemia frequency
In contrast to other settings [48], maternal age was not associated with newborn BP, which is generally related to birth weight [49,50]. In this cohort we found that babies whose mothers had malaria parasitaemia at delivery had lower SBP and DBP (Table 4)
Summary
Hypertension is a public health and economic problem in Sub-Saharan Africa with a prevalence up to 33% in urban areas in Nigeria [1,2]. In sub-Saharan Africa, malaria is hyperendemic, in pregnancy with prevalence rates from 20 to 44% in Nigerian women [5]. Most cases of malaria in pregnancy are asymptomatic because of immunity acquired during previous exposures [5,6]. In. Hypertension is an increasing health issue in sub-Saharan Africa where malaria remains common in pregnancy. We established a birth cohort in Nigeria to evaluate the early impact of maternal malaria on newborn blood pressure (BP)
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