Literature DB >> 11716132

Pre-exposure anti-Campylobacter jejuni immunoglobulin a levels associated with reduced risk of Campylobacter diarrhea in adults traveling to Thailand.

S E Walz1, S Baqar, H J Beecham, P Echeverria, C Lebron, M McCarthy, R Kuschner, S Bowling, A L Bourgeois, D A Scott.   

Abstract

Diarrhea history questionnaires were administered to 369 U.S. military volunteers before and after deployment to Thailand. Additionally, blood samples obtained from a subset of 221 volunteers 1-3 weeks previously and 3-4 weeks after their deployment were tested by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for immunoglobulin A to Campylobacter jejuni. Stool samples from personnel (including volunteers) contracting diarrhea in Thailand were cultured for enteric pathogens. Overall, 35.2% (130 of 369) of questionnaire respondents reported one or more diarrhea episodes during their trip. Volunteers with pretravel anti-C. jejuni reciprocal titers < or = 450 were 1.6 times as likely to have had diarrhea during their stay in Thailand compared with those with pretravel titers > 450 (39.7% versus 25.3%; P = 0.05). The symptomatic seroconversion, or attributable Campylobacter diarrhea attack rate, for the 1-month exercise was 12.7% (28 of 221). The symptomatic seroconversion rate in nonimmune (titer < or = 450) volunteers was 17.1%, whereas that in immune volunteers was only 4.0% (P = 0.002). Campylobacter jejuni or C. coli were recovered from 32.9% (56 of 170) of stool samples cultured and were the most commonly identified enteropathogens. Campylobacter diarrhea was associated with elevated temperatures, fecal red cells, and fecal white blood cells. The results of this study show that Campylobacter continues to represent a significant health threat to Western travelers to Thailand, but many of these travelers have preexisting Campylobacter immunity that protects them from clinically significant Campylobacter enteritis.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11716132     DOI: 10.4269/ajtmh.2001.65.652

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Trop Med Hyg        ISSN: 0002-9637            Impact factor:   2.345


  8 in total

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Authors:  David R Tribble; Shahida Baqar; Daniel A Scott; Michael L Oplinger; Fernando Trespalacios; David Rollins; Richard I Walker; John D Clements; Steven Walz; Paul Gibbs; Edward F Burg; Anthony P Moran; Lisa Applebee; A Louis Bourgeois
Journal:  Infect Immun       Date:  2010-01-19       Impact factor: 3.441

3.  Recrudescent Campylobacter jejuni infection in an immunocompetent adult following experimental infection with a well-characterized organism.

Authors:  Shahida Baqar; David R Tribble; Marya Carmolli; Katrin Sadigh; Frederic Poly; Chad Porter; Catherine J Larsson; Kristen K Pierce; Patricia Guerry; Michael Darsley; Beth Kirkpatrick
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4.  Does age acquired immunity confer selective protection to common serotypes of Campylobacter jejuni?

Authors:  Gordon Miller; Geoff M Dunn; Thomas M S Reid; Iain D Ogden; Norval J C Strachan
Journal:  BMC Infect Dis       Date:  2005-08-23       Impact factor: 3.090

5.  Incidence of Campylobacter concisus and C. ureolyticus in traveler's diarrhea cases and asymptomatic controls in Nepal and Thailand.

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Journal:  Gut Pathog       Date:  2017-08-17       Impact factor: 4.181

6.  Campylobacter infection as a trigger for Guillain-Barré syndrome in Egypt.

Authors:  Thomas F Wierzba; Ibrahim Adib Abdel-Messih; Bayoumi Gharib; Shahida Baqar; Amina Hendaui; Ibrahim Khalil; Tarek A Omar; Hamed E Khayat; Shannon D Putnam; John W Sanders; Lai-King Ng; Lawrence J Price; Daniel A Scott; Robert R Frenck
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2008-11-12       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  Antibiotic resistance in Campylobacter and other diarrheal pathogens isolated from US military personnel deployed to Thailand in 2002-2004: a case-control study.

Authors:  Carl J Mason; Siriporn Sornsakrin; Jessica C Seidman; Apichai Srijan; Oralak Serichantalergs; Nucharee Thongsen; Michael W Ellis; Viseth Ngauy; Brett E Swierczewski; Ladaporn Bodhidatta
Journal:  Trop Dis Travel Med Vaccines       Date:  2017-07-05

8.  Travelers' diarrhea: update on the incidence, etiology and risk in military and similar populations - 1990-2005 versus 2005-2015, does a decade make a difference?

Authors:  Scott Olson; Alexis Hall; Mark S Riddle; Chad K Porter
Journal:  Trop Dis Travel Med Vaccines       Date:  2019-01-15
  8 in total

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