Disease: Parvovirus antenatal infection
- Association of fetal loss with recent parvovirus infection and other demographic prognostic risk factors
- Ballantyne syndrome and congenital anaemia associated with Parvovirus B19 infection: case report and review
- Confirmation of etiology in fetal hydrops by sonographic evaluation of fluid allocation patterns
- Diagnostic and prognostic value of molecular and serological investigation of human parvovirus B19 infection during pregnancy
- Fetal Brain Injury Associated with Parvovirus B19 Congenital Infection Requiring Intrauterine Transfusion
- Fetal Intracardiac Transfusions in Hydropic Fetuses with Severe Anemia
- Infection au parvovirus B19 pendant la grossesse
- Infections in pregnancy
- Intracardiac Fetal Transfusion for Parvovirus-Induced Hydrops Fetalis: A Salvage Procedure
- Non-immune hydrops fetalis without anemia due to parvovirus B19
- Parvovirus B19 infection in pregnancy
- Parvovirus B19 infection in pregnancy-awareness and opportunities
- Persistence of Villous Immaturity in Term Deliveries Following Intrauterine Transfusion for Parvovirus B19 Infection and RhD-associated Hemolytic Disease of the Fetus and Newborn
- PREVALENCE OF HUMAN PARVOVIRUS B19 IgG AND IgM ANTIBODIES AMONG PREGNANT WOMEN ATTENDING ANTENATAL CLINIC AT FEDERAL TEACHING HOSPITAL IDO-EKITI, NIGERIA
- Recent parvovirus B19 infection in late pregnancy
- Risks for adverse pregnancy outcomes and infections in daycare workers: an overview of current epidemiological evidence and implications for primary prevention
- Serological detection of human parvovirus B19 infection and associated risk factors among pregnant women in Jigawa State, Nigeria
- Seroprevalence and Determinants of ToRCH Pathogens in Pregnant Women in the Sub-Himalayan Region
- SOGC Guideline Retirement Notice No. 2
- The magnitude and correlates of Parvovirus B19 infection among pregnant women attending antenatal clinics in Mwanza, Tanzania
- TORCH Antibodies Among Pregnant Women and Their Newborns Receiving Care at Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre, Moshi, Tanzania
- TORCH infections
- Virome characterisation from Guthrie cards in children who later developed acute lymphoblastic leukaemia