Literature DB >> 15228719

The short-term impact of albendazole treatment on Oesophagostomum bifurcum and hookworm infections in northern Ghana.

J B Ziem1, I M J Kettenis, A Bayita, E A T Brienen, S Dittoh, J Horton, A Olsen, P Magnussen, A M Polderman.   

Abstract

In November-December 2002, stool samples from a random sample of the human population (N = 190) in the Garu area of northern Ghana were checked for intestinal helminths, using a single Kato smear and duplicate coprocultures for each subject. All 190 subjects were subsequently treated with a single, 400-mg dose of albendazole and 146 of them were successfully re-examined 21-28 days post-treatment. Prior to treatment, 75.5% of the Kato smears were found to contain 'hookworm-like' eggs (with a geometric mean egg count among the positives of 578 eggs/g faeces), and the third-stage larvae of Oesophagostomum bifurcum and hookworm were found in the cultures of stools from 34.2% and 77.4% of the subjects, respectively. Among the subjects who had positive Kato smears before treatment, albendazole treatment led to a cure 'rate' of 79.0% and an egg-reduction 'rate' of 73.5%. The results from the coprocultures indicated cure 'rates' of 98.0% for O. bifurcum but only 51.3% for hookworm. Only one subject was still positive for O. bifurcum after treatment. Among those still positive for hookworm after treatment, the larva-reduction 'rate' was 79.8%. The egg-/larva-reduction 'rates' among those with heavy infections prior to treatment were >90%, whether the data analysed came from the Kato smears or the coprocultures. It may be concluded that a single dose of albendazole is very likely to cure an O. bifurcum infection and to reduce greatly the intensity (but not the prevalence) of any hookworm infections.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15228719     DOI: 10.1179/000349804225003370

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Trop Med Parasitol        ISSN: 0003-4983


  2 in total

1.  Effectiveness of Albendazole for Hookworm Varies Widely by Community and Correlates with Nutritional Factors: A Cross-Sectional Study of School-Age Children in Ghana.

Authors:  Debbie Humphries; Sara Nguyen; Sunny Kumar; Josephine E Quagraine; Joseph Otchere; Lisa M Harrison; Michael Wilson; Michael Cappello
Journal:  Am J Trop Med Hyg       Date:  2016-11-28       Impact factor: 2.345

2.  Ancestral stories of Ghanaian Bimoba reflect millennia-old genetic lineages.

Authors:  Hernando Sanchez-Faddeev; Jeroen Pijpe; David van Bodegom; Tom van der Hulle; Kristiaan J van der Gaag; Ulrika K Eriksson; Thomas Spear; Rudi G J Westendorp; Peter de Knijff
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-06-12       Impact factor: 3.240

  2 in total

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