Elsevier

Clinics in Perinatology

Volume 38, Issue 3, September 2011, Pages 385-406
Clinics in Perinatology

Cause
The Role of Inflammation and Infection in Preterm Birth

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clp.2011.06.003Get rights and content

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Epidemiologic and clinical data to support the role of inflammation and infection in the pathogenesis of preterm birth

In 1950, Knox and Hoerner9 published their findings that “infection in the female reproductive tract can cause premature rupture of the membranes and induce premature labor.” Despite this initial suggestion of a relationship between infection/inflammation and spontaneous preterm birth more than 60 years ago, the rate of prematurity continues to rise and highly sensitive, clinically useful diagnostic techniques as well as effective therapeutic interventions remain at a loss.

In the 1960s,

The Search for a Valid Animal Model for the Study of Spontaneous Preterm Birth

Because the study of inflammation and infection in human pregnancies and fetuses is subject to ethical factors, the use of animal models is a valuable resource that allows for strict control of environmental, genetic, pharmacologic, maternal, and fetal variables otherwise difficult to regulate in human studies. Rodents, pigs, sheep, and simian models have facilitated the investigation of the role of inflammation and infection in spontaneous preterm birth.4, 123, 124, 125, 126 Studies in animal

Final remarks

Inflammation alone or as a consequence of infection is implicated in spontaneous PTL and preterm birth. It is worthy of continued investigation to determine if these inflammatory processes are causative of preterm birth or surrogates of other biologic pathways. Successful interventions are not likely to occur until the pathogenesis of preterm birth and the role of inflammation in causing not only parturition but also fetal and neonatal injury is fully elucidated. Likely targets for therapy may

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      Citation Excerpt :

      Preterm labor can be induced by multiple pathologic processes linked to intraamniotic inflammation.1–11

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    Financial support: none.

    Financial disclosures and conflicts of interest: The authors have nothing to disclose.

    1

    Drs Bastek and Gómez share first authorship.

    View full text