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Mice
Pose Threat to Unborn Babies
Excerpt
By Colette Bouchez, HealthScoutNews Reporter
(HealthScoutNews)
-- Pregnant women should pass on holding, petting or
otherwise getting near mice and hamsters, no matter how cuddly
and harmless they look, says a new study.
The little
critters may carry a virus that greatly threatens the health of
an unborn baby, says a report in the journal Clinical Infectious
Diseases.
"The
problem is congenital lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV),"
which is an infection carried by mice and hamsters that can cause
birth defects, says Dr. Leslie Barton, a pediatrics professor
at the University of Arizona School of Medicine, and the article's
co-author.
The infection
is often misdiagnosed as one of the other prenatal problems, like
the parasite-caused toxoplamosis, German measles or even some
kinds of herpes virus-caused condition. And the little-known LCMV
infection has also been confused with various nerve, eye and chromosomal
defects in newborns.
The virus,
says Barton, appears mostly in mice and some hamsters and generally
is passed along in urine and feces. Pregnant women can catch it
when they clean an animal's cage, or clean up mice droppings or
sometimes when they merely breathe the air where infected mice
live.
"We suspect
that the virus is most often airborne, and if you live or work
in an area that is populated by mice that carry this infection,
you stand a risk of inhaling the virus," says Barton.
Once inside
the mother's body, the virus travels the bloodstream to affect
baby. Healthy adults aren't unduly affected by the virus, and
a mother-to-be may not have any symptoms, says Barton.
"She
might not know anything is wrong until after she gives birth and
the child is diagnosed with problems," Barton adds.
Those problems,
she says, often include brain disorders linked to mental retardation,
which include fluid on the brain, an abnormal brain size or abnormal
calcium deposits in the brain, as well as serious vision problems.
Although some
experts think the virus is more widespread than we realize, others
in the field are not so sure.
"The
virus definitely exists, but I believe on a very small scale.
It has not been shown to be rampant in mice, and in fact, probably
few carry it. So the chances of picking up LCMV while pregnant
are, right now, very, very slim," says Dr. Joseph Stavola,
chief of Pediatric Infectious Diseases at New York Weill Cornell
Medical Center in New York City.
Stavola says
he has only seen one case of LCMV in more than a decade though
he admits more could be out there waiting to be diagnosed.
"I think
we need large-scale studies to examine how prevalent the virus
is before we scare every pregnant woman who sees a mouse into
thinking her baby is in danger," he adds.
That's precisely
why, Barton says, she penned the new journal article.
"We need
to raise awareness about this virus, in women, and in obstetricians,
and we need large-scale epidemiologic studies to note both the
prevalence of the virus and its potential for widespread infection,"she
explains. So far, she says, LCMV has been detected in rodents
from almost all sections of the United States.
Learning more
about LCMV could give a name and a reason to many otherwise-unexplained
conditions in infants and children, she notes.
"It is
a terrible feeling knowing that something happened to your child
during pregnancy and not know what the cause was -- or if it could
happen again with a subsequent pregnancy," she says.
The most reliable
existing screening for LCMV is the immunofluorescent antibody
test, a blood workup that checks for the virus in white blood
cells. But, like other viruses, testing positive doesn't always
mean you have an active infection.
"It could
mean you have had the virus in the past, which means you are immune
now, so your baby is not susceptible," says Stavola.
But even if
you test negative -- meaning you are susceptible -- Stavola says
there's no need for alarm.
"Right
now we believe the chance for contracting this virus is small,
so it's not a concern for most pregnant women," says Stavola.
Barton, however,
believes what we don't know about LCMV is probably greater
than what we do know.
"We know
it's a virus. We know it's out there. We know it can cause serious
birth defects. But what we don't know is how much, how often,
and how many are susceptible," says Barton.
Pregnant women
at greatest risk for LCMV are laboratory workers who handle rodents,
or those who live or work in areas where there are a lot of mice.
And, says Barton, that pet hamster you dearly love could also
be a germ factory. So far, however, rats do not appear to carry
LCMV.
What To
Do
Both experts
say common sense and basic hygiene can go a long way in protecting
you and your unborn child against LCMV and other prenatal risks.
"If you
are pregnant, wash your hands frequently, don't clean the hamster
cage or sweep up rodent droppings, and whenever possible, avoid
areas populated with mice," says Stavola.
For more information
on the full range of prenatal tests that can help protect mother
and baby, visit this
March of Dimes site.
To learn more
about the causes of all birth defects, click
here or
here.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
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