| Literature DB >> 24025220 |
Claudia Muñoz-Zanzi1, Jessica Williams-Nguyen, Edward A Belongia.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Toxoplasmosis is among the most widespread and prevalent zoonosis in the world. People can become infected through ingestion of oocysts shed by felids or of tissue cysts contained in meat from infected animals. Acute infection can result in a wide spectrum of consequences, including flu-like illness and retinitis, as well as congenital infection in pregnant women. Severe disease can occur, especially if people are immunocompromised. Frequency of human infection varies substantially by region due to ecological, social, and cultural factors. The most recent nationwide prevalence estimates in children from United States were 3.6% in 6-11 year olds and 5.8% in 12-19 year olds. Because of the limited knowledge of the occurrence of common zoonotic pathogens in children in the United States, the objective of this study was to estimate the sero-prevalence of T. gondii-specific antibodies in children from the Marshfield area in Wisconsin and to examine the association between sero-positivity and farm living.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24025220 PMCID: PMC3847651 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-13-837
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Toxoplasmosis exposure by demographic characteristics in children from Wisconsin, United States 1997–1999 based on detection of pathogen-specific IgG antibodies
| All participants | 37/342 | 10.8% (7.7 – 14.6) | -- |
| Farm residence | | | <0.001 |
| Yes | 29/158 | 18.4% (12.7 – 25.3) | |
| No | 8/184 | 4.4% (1.9 – 8.4) | |
| Age (years) | | | 0.145, 0.049b |
| 2–5 | 4/75 | 5.3% (1.5 – 13.1) | |
| 6–10 | 9/91 | 9.9% (4.6 – 18.0) | |
| >10 | 24/176 | 13.6% (8.9 – 19.6) | |
| Sex | | | 0.230 |
| Male | 23/183 | 12.6% (8.1 – 18.3) | |
| Female | 14/159 | 8.8% (4.9 – 14.3) |
aObserved prevalence and 95% Exact binomial confidence interval.
bChi-square test for trend.
Figure 1Sensitivity analysis of the choice of priors for assay sensitivity (SE) and specificity (SP) on the Bayesian adjusted estimate of toxoplasmosis sero-prevalence in a population of children from Wisconsin, United States, 1997–1999. Sensitivity analysis included various scenarios for most likely value while keeping the range provided by expert opinion. 1: SE >85% and mode = 100%, SP >90% and mode = 100%; 2: SE >85% and mode = 100%, SP >90% and mode = 91%; 3: SE >85% and mode = 86%, SP >90% and mode = 100%, 4: SE > 85% and mode = 86%, SP >90% and mode = 91%; 5: SE 85% - 100%, SP 90% - 100%.