Sunday, 29 March 2026

N cong malf

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Here’s a clear, concise summary of the study on congenital malformations in neonatal cases from Tangier:


3 Points – Congenital Malformations in 101 Neonatal Cases

Authors: F. Tahiri, S. Zouini, K. Ettoini, M. Zouine, L. Chater, A. El Madi, A. Oulmaati

Study Overview

  • Setting: Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, Mohammed VI University Hospital, Tangier, Morocco

  • Period: April 2023 – July 2024

  • Sample: 833 newborns; 101 cases with congenital malformations (hospital frequency: 12.12%)

Key Findings

  1. Maternal Characteristics & Risk Factors

    • Mean maternal age: 31.3 years; parity: 2.66

    • Chronic maternal diseases: 22.8% (diabetes 10.9%, hypertension 5.9%)

    • Iron/folic acid supplementation: 62.4%

    • Prenatal consultations ≥3: 56.4%

    • Family history of malformations: 7%; parental consanguinity: 22% (first-degree 18%)

    • Predominantly urban origin: 89.1%

  2. Types of Congenital Malformations

    TypeCasesPercentage
    Polymalformative syndromes5823.77%
    Cardiovascular malformations5221.31%
    Digestive/abdominal wall4920.08%
    Face and neck249.83%
    Central nervous system197.78%
    Osteoarticular156.14%
    Urogenital/renal124.91%
    Oral cavity93.68%
    Skin31.22%
    Respiratory31.22%
    • Most frequent cardiovascular malformation: patent ductus arteriosus

    • Most frequent digestive malformation: esophageal atresia

    • Most frequent CNS malformation: hydrocephalus

    • Most frequent osteoarticular malformation: clubfoot

  3. Diagnosis, Management & Outcomes

    • Mean age at diagnosis: 3.98 days

    • Diagnostic tools: Ultrasound, X-ray, CT/MRI, echocardiography

    • Care: Surgical (59 cases), medical (30 cases), psychological support (11 parents), genetic counseling (12 parents)

    • Mortality: 35 newborns did not survive hospitalization

Discussion & Public Health Implications

  • Global Context: Congenital malformations affect 5–10% in LMICs; WHO estimates 6% of births worldwide

  • Risk Factors: Maternal chronic disease, consanguinity, poor prenatal care, urban residence, inadequate supplementation

  • Prevention: Emphasis on prenatal care, folic acid supplementation, genetic counseling, antenatal diagnosis, and multidisciplinary care

  • Prognosis: Depends on type of malformation and quality of care; functional disabilities and mortality remain high without specialized intervention

Conclusion

  • Polymalformative syndromes, cardiovascular, digestive, face/neck, and CNS malformations dominate in Tangier.

  • Early diagnosis, prenatal monitoring, and a multidisciplinary approach are essential for improving outcomes.

  • Public health strategies should target consanguinity screening, pregnancy monitoring, and access to antenatal diagnosis.


If you want, I can also create a visual summary chart showing the frequency of malformations and risk factors, which makes this data much easier to digest at a glance. Do you want me to do that?

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