| Literature DB >> 1527413 |
A H Baqui1, R B Sack, R E Black, K Haider, A Hossain, A R Alim, M Yunus, H R Chowdhury, A K Siddique.
Abstract
A longitudinal study of diarrhea was carried out from May 1988 to April 1989 by household surveillance of 705 children less than 5 years old in rural Bangladesh. Stool samples were examined for enteric pathogens at the beginning of each diarrheal episode. For persistent episodes, stool examination was repeated on days 15-17 of the illness. For each case of persistent diarrhea, stool samples from age-matched acute diarrheal and healthy controls were examined. Compared with healthy controls, cases of diarrhea were associated with Shigella species (P = .07) and rotavirus (P less than .05). Diffusely adherent Escherichia coli (P less than .05) and cryptosporidia (P = .07) were the only enteropathogens associated with persistent diarrhea in comparison with acute diarrhea. No more than 15% of children had the same class of pathogen identified from stool on both days 1-3 and days 15-17, indicating that persistent infection was uncommon. However, a different enteropathogen was frequently found on days 15-17, suggesting that sequential infection may be a cause of persistent diarrhea.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1992 PMID: 1527413 DOI: 10.1093/infdis/166.4.792
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Infect Dis ISSN: 0022-1899 Impact factor: 5.226