Cesarean
Delivery Performed Before Labor Onset on a Woman With Intact Amniotic Membranes
Cesarean
delivery does not prevent mother-to-child transmission of GBS because GBS can
cross intact amniotic membranes (32,33).
A risk
does exist for transmission of GBS from a colonized mother to her infant during
a cesarean delivery.
However,
a retrospective study at a single hospital (138), a national
population-based study from Sweden (139), and a review of CDC active,
population-based surveillance data (CDC, unpublished data, 1998--1999 and
2003--2004) indicated that when a cesarean delivery is performed before onset
of labor on a woman with intact amniotic membranes, the risk for early-onset
GBS disease among full-term infants is extremely low.
Data on
risk for transmission to preterm infants born via cesarean delivery performed
before onset of labor on a woman with intact amniotic membranes are limited;
however, the risk for transmission is likely much lower than in the setting of
vaginal delivery or cesarean delivery following rupture of membranes or onset
of labor.
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