Literature DB >> 16438133

Determination of fecal occult blood in primary schoolchildren infected with Trichuris trichiura.

Darawan Wanachiwanawin1, Sirichit Wongkamchai, Sumart Loymek, Surasak Suvuttho, Nantiya Monkon, Pisit Chinabutra, Praphatip Eamsobhana, Suthipol Udompunturak.   

Abstract

A correlation of Trichuris trichiura infection and fecal occult blood detection was conducted in 146 primary schoolchildren in Narathiwat Province, Thailand. The Kato-Katz thick smear method was used for determining egg counts and stated as eggs per gram of feces (epg). The number of T. trichiura eggs was categorized as class I (1-499 epg), class 11 (500-4,999 epg), and class III (> 5,000 epg), according to the relation between infection intensity and reduced hemoglobin concentration. Each fecal sample was processed to detect occult blood using a guaiac-based test (Hema-Screen, USA) and an immunochromatographic-based test (HEXAGON OBTI test, Germany). There were 50 schoolchildren without parasitic infection in the control group. Of 96 cases with T. trichiura infection, 85 and 11 children were classified in the class I and class II groups, respectively, but no subjects were in the class III group. Positive occult blood detection results in the control, class I, and class II groups using the guaiac and the immunochemical tests were 0, 3.5, and 9.1% (p=0.19), and 0, 2.4, and 36.4%, (p<0.0001) respectively. This study suggests that T. trichiura infection with an intensity of 500 epg or greater may be associated with intestinal bleeding.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16438133

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Southeast Asian J Trop Med Public Health        ISSN: 0125-1562            Impact factor:   0.267


  3 in total

1.  Fecal occult blood test and gastrointestinal parasitic infection.

Authors:  Majed H Wakid
Journal:  J Parasitol Res       Date:  2010-07-26

2.  Assessment of fecal calprotectin and fecal occult blood as point-of-care markers for soil-transmitted helminth attributable intestinal morbidity in a case-control substudy conducted in Côte d'Ivoire, Lao PDR and Pemba Island, Tanzania.

Authors:  Chandni Patel; Ladina Keller; Sophie Welsche; Jan Hattendorf; Somphou Sayasone; Said M Ali; Shaali M Ame; Jean Tenena Coulibaly; Eveline Hürlimann; Jennifer Keiser
Journal:  EClinicalMedicine       Date:  2021-01-30

3.  Fecal occult blood and fecal calprotectin as point-of-care markers of intestinal morbidity in Ugandan children with Schistosoma mansoni infection.

Authors:  Amaya L Bustinduy; José C Sousa-Figueiredo; Moses Adriko; Martha Betson; Alan Fenwick; Narcis Kabatereine; J Russell Stothard
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2013-11-14
  3 in total

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