CASE REPORTS
JOURNAL ARTICLE
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Crohn's disease after in-utero measles virus exposure.

Lancet 1996 August 25
BACKGROUND: An epidemiological association between Crohn's disease and measles virus exposure in early life has been suggested in case-control studies.

METHODS: To determine absolute risk estimates for in-utero measles virus exposure and Crohn's disease, maternity charts for all 25000 deliveries at University Hospital, Uppsala, between 1940-49 were reviewed: four cases of measles infection in the mother during pregnancy were identified. The children and two of their mothers were interviewed and case records reviewed. Three offspring had undergone multiple intestinal resections; tissue from these cases were examined by routine histology, and for measles-virus nucleoprotein antigen by immunohistochemistry and immunogold electronmicroscopy.

FINDINGS: Three of the four children had Crohn's disease. In each the disease was preceded by recurrent, antibiotic-resistant pneumonia. They had extensive ileal and colonic disease; two patients required intravenous feeding. The only offspring to have had measles as a child did not develop Crohn's disease. Measles virus antigen was detected in foci of granulomatous and lymphocytic inflammation in all children with Crohn's disease.

INTERPRETATION: The data indicate that exposure of mothers to measles virus in utero is a risk factor for Crohn's disease in their children. Exposure at this time may lead to persistent infection, or modify the response to infection in later life, leading to persistence of measles virus.

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