Literature DB >> 1340317

Low risk of invasive amebiasis in cyst carriers. A longitudinal molecular seroepidemiological study.

G M Ruiz-Palacios1, G Castañon, R Bojalil, E Tercero, S Rausser, L Herbert, N Agabian, A Martínez-Palomo.   

Abstract

A seroepidemiological study of a household cohort, using both clinical observational and molecular criteria was conducted in a periurban area endemic for E. histolytica infection. This longitudinal study was undertaken to determine the risk of asymptomatic cyst carriers to develop invasive illness. Zymodeme patterns of strains isolated from these patients were correlated both with the clinical presentation of disease and with the serological response against the M-17 ameba antigen and further compared with that found in 16 proven cases of amebic liver abscess. From a total of 163 housewives screened, 39, (24%) were asymptomatic cyst carriers; 31 of them (index cases) and 114 members of their households remained in the study over an 8 month follow-up period to detect ameba infection and illness. Of the household members at risk, 46 (40%) became infected within 6 weeks. None of the index or secondary cases developed ameba-related symptoms and cyst excretion followed a chronic persistent, intermittent, or transient pattern over the period of the study. Amebas were recovered and zymodemes determined in 19 of 71 (27%) cyst carriers. Ameba shed from each of these 19 carriers exhibited nonpathogenic zymodeme 1, except for one index case where zymodeme 2 was recovered in one sampling, and returned to zymodeme 1 in subsequent samples. Of 48 of 71 cyst carriers studied, antibodies to crude E. histolytica antigen were detected by ELISA in 16 (31%); antibodies to the M-17 fusion protein were found in 8 (16%) by ELISA and in 2 (4%) by Western-Blot (p < 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1340317

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Med Res        ISSN: 0188-4409            Impact factor:   2.235


  6 in total

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Journal:  Intern Med       Date:  2020-07-28       Impact factor: 1.271

5.  Prevalence and risk factors associated with Entamoeba histolytica/dispar/moshkovskii infection among three Orang Asli ethnic groups in Malaysia.

Authors:  Tengku Shahrul Anuar; Hesham M Al-Mekhlafi; Mohamed Kamel Abdul Ghani; Emelia Osman; Azlin Mohd Yasin; Anisah Nordin; Siti Nor Azreen; Fatmah Md Salleh; Nuraffini Ghazali; Mekadina Bernadus; Norhayati Moktar
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-10-25       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  Molecular Epidemiology of Amoebiasis: A Cross-Sectional Study among North East Indian Population.

Authors:  Joyobrato Nath; Sankar Kumar Ghosh; Baby Singha; Jaishree Paul
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2015-12-03
  6 in total

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