| Literature DB >> 22330320 |
Li-Guang Tian1, Jia-Xu Chen, Tian-Ping Wang, Guo-Jin Cheng, Peter Steinmann, Feng-Feng Wang, Yu-Chun Cai, Xiao-Mei Yin, Jian Guo, Li Zhou, Xiao-Nong Zhou.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Intestinal parasite infections (IPIs) are among the most significant causes of illness and disease of socially and economically disadvantaged populations in developing countries, including rural areas of the People's Republic of China. With the spread of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) among rural Chinese populations, there is ample scope for co-infections and there have been increasing fears about their effects. However, hardly any relevant epidemiological studies have been carried out in the country. The aim of the present survey was to assess the IPI infection status among a representative sample of HIV-positive Chinese in rural Anhui province, and compare the findings with those from a cohort of non-infected individuals.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22330320 PMCID: PMC3310850 DOI: 10.1186/1756-3305-5-36
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Figure 1Participation in a survey on co-infections of HIV and intestinal parasites in a rural area of Fuyang city, Anhui province, People's Republic of China.
Demographic information of the study participants.
| variable | HIV-positive (n = 302) | HIV-negative (n = 303) |
|---|---|---|
| Sex | ||
| male | 143 (47.4%) | 144(47.5%) |
| female | 159 (52.6%) | 159(52.5%) |
| Average age* (year) | 42.8(41.6, 44.0) | 41.5(40.2, 42.7) |
| Agricultural household* | ||
| yes | 258(90.2%) | 260(87.5%) |
| no | 28(9.8%) | 37(12.5%) |
| Ethnicity* | ||
| Han | 284(99.3%) | 293(98.6%) |
| Others | 2(0.7%) | 4(1.4%) |
| Marriage status* | ||
| single | 6(2.1%) | 16(5.4%) |
| married | 280(97.9%) | 281(94.6%) |
| Educational status* | ||
| illiterate | 91(31.8%) | 72(24.2%) |
| primary school | 148(51.8%) | 100(33.7%) |
| junior high school | 45(15.7%) | 110(37.0%) |
| high school | 2(0.7%) | 15(5.1%) |
| college graduates and above | 0 | 0 |
| Occupation* | ||
| student | 2(0.7%) | 7(2.4%) |
| farmer | 283(98.9%) | 286(96.3%) |
| worker | 1(0.4%) | 4(1.3%) |
* HIV positives n = 286; HIV negatives n = 297
Parasitic infections of HIV positive and HIV negative study participants
| Parasite species | HIV positives (n = 302) | HIV negatives (n = 303) | χ2 value | P value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 0.66 (2) | 0.4992* | ||
| Hookworm | 3.64 (11) | 4.29 (13) | 0.1667 | 0.6830 |
| 0.66 (2) | 0.33 (1) | 0.6238* | ||
| 0.33 (1) | 0.66 (2) | 1.0000* | ||
| Helminths | 4.30 (13) | 5.30 (16) | 0.3156 | 0.5742 |
| 16.23 (49) | 22.11 (67) | 3.3825 | 0.0659 | |
| 1.32 (4) | 0.66 (2) | 0.4504* | ||
| 1.66 (5) | 0.99 (3) | 0.5045* | ||
| 8.28 (25) | 2.97 (9) | 8.0399 | 0.0046 | |
| Protozoa | 23.2 (70) | 25.80 (76) | 0.2994 | 0.5843 |
* tested by Fisher exact test, others tested by chi-square test
Multivariate logistic regression analysis of risk factors for HIV and Cryptosporidium spp.coinfection.
| Variables | Regression coefficient | Standard Error | OR value (95%CI) | χ2 value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| male(1 = yes, 0 = no) | 1.9022 | 0.6092 | 6.700 (2.030, 22.114) | 9.7496 | 0.0018 |
| age < 42 years | 1.4225 | 0.5734 | 4.148 (1.348, 12.761) | 6.1551 | 0.0131 |
| IL-2 < 77(pg/ml) | -1.4872 | 0.5573 | 0.226 (0.076, 0.674) | 7.1208 | 0.0076 |
| Good habits | -1.1275 | 0.5724 | 0.324 (0.105, 0.994) | 3.8803 | 0.0489 |
Multivariate logistic regression analysis of risk factors for HIV and B.hominis coinfection
| Variables | Regression coefficient | Standard Error | OR value (95%CI) | χ2 value | P value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male (1 = yes, 0 = no) | -0.6713 | 0.3643 | 0.511 (0.250, 1.044) | 3.3967 | 0.0653 |
| IL-2 < 77(pg/ml) | 0.4622 | 0.3587 | 0.630 (0.312, 1.272) | 1.6609 | 0.1975 |
| Good nutrition | -1.3350 | 0.6525 | 0.263 (0.073, 0.945) | 4.1861 | 0.0408 |
| Good habit | -0.6422 | 0.3824 | 0.526 (0.249, 1.113) | 2.8202 | 0.0931 |