Artículos de revistas
Spatial and temporal analysis of infant mortality from congenital malformations in Brazil (1996-2010)
Fecha
2014-07Registro en:
Bronberg, Rubén; Dipierri, José; Alfaro Gómez, Emma Laura; Sanseverino, María Teresa; Schüler Faccini, Lavinia; Spatial and temporal analysis of infant mortality from congenital malformations in Brazil (1996-2010); Springer; Journal of Community Genetics; 5; 3; 7-2014; 269-282
1868-310X
1868-6001
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Bronberg, Rubén
Dipierri, José
Alfaro Gómez, Emma Laura
Sanseverino, María Teresa
Schüler Faccini, Lavinia
Resumen
Anencephaly is a lethal malformation characterized by the absence of the skull and both cerebral hemispheres caused by deficiency of closure of the neural tube at rostral level between 23 and 25 days of gestation (Bronberg et al. 2011). The occurrence of anencephaly and other neural tube defects (NTDs) such as meningocele and spina bifida are between 50 and 70 % preventable by periconceptional folic acid (FA) administration to reduce their prevalence across populations (Blencowe et al. 2010). The percentage decrease is dependent upon the background prevalence. The percentage of NTDs that are preventable by periconceptional folic acid intake is dependent on the prevalence of folate-sensitive NTDs in the population (Robbins et al. 2006; Bronberg et al. 2011).