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home:pathogenesis:successive_infection [09.09.2012] – [Pea soup] paulalberthome:pathogenesis:successive_infection [09.09.2012] – [Evidence from clinical and laboratory-based studies] paulalbert
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   * **Prenatal infection and autism** – A population-wide study from Denmark spanning two decades of births indicates that infection during pregnancy increases the risk of autism in the child. Hospitalization for a viral infection, like the flu, during the first trimester of pregnancy triples the odds. Bacterial infection, including of the urinary tract, during the second trimester increases chances by 40 percent.(({{pubmed>long:20414802}}))   * **Prenatal infection and autism** – A population-wide study from Denmark spanning two decades of births indicates that infection during pregnancy increases the risk of autism in the child. Hospitalization for a viral infection, like the flu, during the first trimester of pregnancy triples the odds. Bacterial infection, including of the urinary tract, during the second trimester increases chances by 40 percent.(({{pubmed>long:20414802}}))
   * **Childhood infections and asthma** – Children who experience repeated rhinovirus-induced wheezing episodes in infancy have a significantly increased risk of developing asthma.(({{pubmed>long:22053589}})) Neonates colonized in the hypopharyngeal region with //S. pneumoniae, H. influenzae,// or //M. catarrhalis,// or with a combination of these organisms, are at increased risk for recurrent wheeze and asthma early in life.(({{pubmed>long:17928596}}))    * **Childhood infections and asthma** – Children who experience repeated rhinovirus-induced wheezing episodes in infancy have a significantly increased risk of developing asthma.(({{pubmed>long:22053589}})) Neonates colonized in the hypopharyngeal region with //S. pneumoniae, H. influenzae,// or //M. catarrhalis,// or with a combination of these organisms, are at increased risk for recurrent wheeze and asthma early in life.(({{pubmed>long:17928596}})) 
 +  * **Enterovirus and type I diabetes** – A 2010 Norwegian paper showed that progression from islet autoimmunity to type 1 diabetes may increase after an enterovirus infection, characterized by the presence of viral RNA in blood.(({{pubmed>long:20858685}})) 
  
  
home/pathogenesis/successive_infection.txt · Last modified: 09.14.2022 by 127.0.0.1
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