Coccidioidomycosis and Pregnancy

Abstract
Pregnant women with respiratory symptoms of pleuritic pain and productive cough should undergo evaluation for coccidioidomycosis. This should include a history of travel or residency in endemic areas and careful assessment for toxic erythema, erythema nodosum, or erythema multiforme. To confirm a diagnosis of this disease, a sputum culture, wet mount, and serological tests should be performed. The risk of dissemination, which is highest in the second and third trimesters, can be estimated by a complement-fixation titer. In disseminated cases aggressive treatment with amphotericin B has improved the previously reported high maternal and neonatal mortality rate. Fortunately, case reports do not indicate that transplacental spread occurs. Reactivation or exacerbation of a chronic low-grade infection during pregnancy may occur in patients treated for prior disseminated disease (32, 34). Interestingly, both of the reported cases of reactivation or exacerbation occurred in insulin-dependent diabetics.

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