Is Pneumocystis carinii vertically transmitted to neonatal rats?

  • Hong, Sung-Tae (Department of Parasitology, Seoul National University College of Medicine and Institute of Endemic Diseases) ;
  • Park, Yun-Kyu (Department of Parasitology, Catholic University of Korea) ;
  • Kim, Jin (Department of Parasitology, Seonam University College of Medicin) ;
  • Kim, Dug-Ha (Department of Pediatrics, Hallym University College of Medicine) ;
  • Yun, Chong-Ku (Department of Pediatrics, Seoul National University College of Medicine)
  • Published : 1999.09.01

Abstract

Pneumocystis carinii is pulmonary pathogen of immunocompromised humans or other mammals. Its infection results from activation of organism involves in latent infection or form new infection through the air. Almost all children are known to be infected within 2 to 4 years of birth, though prenatal transplacental transmission has not yet been demonstrated. In this study we observed experimental P.carinii infection in neonatal rats, thus investigating the possibility of transplacental vertical transmission by Diff-Quik staining of the lung impression smears and in-sity hybridization for lung sections. The postive rate of P.carinii infection in immunosuppressed maternal rats was 100%, but that in normal maternal rats was 0%. Cystic forms of P.carinii were observed in three of six 1-week old neonatal rats born of heavily infected mothers, but none of them was positive by in-situ hybridization. Five weeks after birth, cystic forms were detected in four neonatal rats. In the lobes of the lungs, no predilection site of P.carinii was recognized. Counts of cystic forms on smears and the reactivity of in-situ hbridization in the lungs of neonatal rats 0 were signficantly lower than in maternal rats. The present findings suggest that P.carinii is rarely transmitted through the placenta and proliferates less successfully in the lungs of neonatal rats than in mothers.

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