Literature DB >> 11136744

Multiyear prospective study of intestinal parasitism in a cohort of Peace Corps volunteers in Guatemala.

B L Herwaldt1, K R de Arroyave, S P Wahlquist, A M de Merida, A S Lopez, D D Juranek.   

Abstract

We conducted a prospective, longitudinal study in a cohort of 36 Peace Corps volunteers (PCVs) in Guatemala to study the incidence and natural history of intestinal parasitic infections during the PCVs' >2-year overseas stay. PCVs collected stool specimens at least monthly and when ill with gastrointestinal symptoms. Of the 1,168 specimens tested, 453 (38.8%) were positive for at least one parasite and 48 (4.1%) were positive for a pathogenic parasite. A median interval of 187 days (range, 14 to 752 days) elapsed before the first documented parasitic infection, and the median intervals from arrival until subsequent infections (e.g., second or third) were >300 days. The PCVs had 116 episodes of infection with 11 parasites, including up to 4 episodes per PCV with specific nonpathogens and Blastocystis hominis. The incidence, in episodes per 100 person-years, was highest for B. hominis (65), followed by Entamoeba coli (31), Cryptosporidium parvum (17), and Entamoeba hartmanni (17). The PCVs' B. hominis episodes lasted 6,809 person-days (28.7% of the 23,689 person-days in the study), the E. coli episodes lasted 2,055 person-days (8.7%), and each of the other types of episodes lasted <2% of the person-days in the study. Gastrointestinal symptoms were somewhat more common and more persistent, but not significantly so, in association with pathogen episodes than with B. hominis and nonpathogen episodes. Although infections with pathogenic parasites could account for only a minority of the PCVs' diarrheal episodes, the continued acquisition of parasitic infections throughout the PCVs' >2-year stay in Guatemala suggests that PCVs repeatedly had fecal exposures and thus were at risk for infections with both parasitic and nonparasitic pathogens throughout their overseas service.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11136744      PMCID: PMC87675          DOI: 10.1128/JCM.39.1.34-42.2001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Microbiol        ISSN: 0095-1137            Impact factor:   5.948


  26 in total

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3.  Infections with intestinal parasites in Peace Corps volunteers in Guatemala.

Authors:  B L Herwaldt; K R de Arroyave; S P Wahlquist; L J du Pée; T R Eng; D D Juranek
Journal:  J Clin Microbiol       Date:  1994-05       Impact factor: 5.948

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6.  A multiyear prospective study of the risk factors for and incidence of diarrheal illness in a cohort of Peace Corps volunteers in Guatemala.

Authors:  B L Herwaldt; K R de Arroyave; J M Roberts; D D Juranek
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8.  The contrasting epidemiology of Cyclospora and Cryptosporidium among outpatients in Guatemala.

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5.  Blastocystis hominis infection in long-term care facilities in Taiwan: prevalence and associated clinical factors.

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7.  Diagnosis of multiple enteric protozoan infections by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay in the Guatemalan highlands.

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8.  Incidence and risk factors of Blastocystis infection in an orphanage in Bangkok, Thailand.

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  8 in total

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