A 44-member international research team studied 64 stillbirth cases and four early neonatal deaths from 12 countries to determine how COVID-19 caused perinatal deaths in unvaccinated expecting mothers, USA Today reported. The findings, published in Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine, showed that the COVID-19 infection destroys the placenta, depriving the foetus of oxygen.
Researchers determined the virus reaches the placenta and causes it to fail by passing through the mother's bloodstream, a process known as viremia. "Our study identified placental insufficiency as the root cause for stillbirths in women with COVID-19 during pregnancy," said Dr David Schwartz, an Atlanta-based pathologist who led the study, was quoted as saying. "Among the 68 cases, an average of 77 percent of the placenta had been destroyed and rendered useless for supporting critical foetal needs, resulting in stillbirth or early neonatal death," he added.
In all the studied cases, researchers found the placentas from infected mothers had a severe abnormality called SARS-CoV-2 placentitis, Schwartz said. The team also found viral-induced lesions in the placenta blocked maternal and foetal blood flow and oxygen, killing placental tissues and causing "irreparable damage", the report said. Further, in almost all the cases, an increase was observed in fibrin -- a key protein involved with blood clotting -- was so "massive" it blocked blood and oxygen flow to the placenta.