Akush Ginekol (Mosk)
February 1992
Endometrial, endocervical, and urethral specimens were obtained from 16 nonpregnant women with a history of habitual abortions. Chlamydia were isolated from the endometria of 4 women, but only in one case chlamydial intracytoplasmic incorporations in endometrial cells were detectable by the Romanovsky Giemza staining. Endometrial Chlamydia infection was diagnosed in 5 of the 16 patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn examination of 163 females suffering from habitual miscarriage revealed chlamydia in 41.7%. The miscarriage rate was 59.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Chlamydozoan population was identified in 43.6 per cent of 110 females with a history of habitual abortion. It was found that the infection was more frequent in females aged under 30 years, in those who was born preterm, in patients with early (premarital) sexual contacts or those with spontaneously stopped pregnancy during the first trimester, as well as in those females who suffered from cervicitis, yeast colpitis, pyelonephritis or had post-inflammatory changes of placental tissue.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF