Pregnant women are more severely affected by
influenza,
hepatitis E,
herpes simplex and
malaria.
Viral infections During the
2009 H1N1 pandemic, as well as during interpandemic periods, women in the
third trimester of pregnancy were at increased risk for severe disease, such as disease requiring admission to an
intensive care unit or resulting in death, as compared with women in an earlier stage of pregnancy. For
hepatitis E, the
case fatality rate among pregnant women has been estimated to be between 15% and 25%, as compared with a range of 0.5 to 4% in the population overall, with the highest susceptibility in the third trimester. Primary
herpes simplex infection, when occurring in pregnant women, has an increased risk of dissemination and hepatitis, an otherwise rare complication in immunocompetent adults, particularly during the third trimester. Also, recurrences of
herpes genitalis increase in frequency during pregnancy.
Varicella occurs at an increased rate during pregnancy, but mortality is not higher than that among men and non-pregnant women.
Parasitic infections The risk of severe
malaria by
Plasmodium falciparum is three times as high in pregnant women, with a median maternal mortality of 40% reported in studies in the Asia–Pacific region. In women where the pregnancy is not the first, malaria infection is more often
asymptomatic, even at high parasitic loads, compared to women having their first pregnancy. There is a decreasing susceptibility to malaria with increasing parity, probably due to immunity to pregnancy-specific
antigens. Young maternal age and increases the risk. Studies differ whether the risk is different in different
trimesters. Limited data suggest that malaria caused by
Plasmodium vivax is also more severe during pregnancy.
Fungal infections Severe and disseminated
coccidioidomycosis has been reported to occur in increased frequency in pregnant women in several reports and
case series, but subsequent large surveys, with the overall risk being rather low.
Bacterial infections Listeriosis mostly occurs during the third trimester, with
Hispanic women appearing to be at particular risk. Listeriosis is a
vertically transmitted infection that may cause
miscarriage,
stillbirth,
preterm birth, or serious
neonatal disease. == Severity and Complications ==