| Literature DB >> 28400860 |
Arpit Kumar Shrivastava1, Subrat Kumar1, Nirmal Kumar Mohakud2, Mrutyunjay Suar1, Priyadarshi Soumyaranjan Sahu1,2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There are multiple etiologies responsible for infectious gastroenteritis causing acute diarrhea which are often under diagnosed. Also acute diarrhea is one of the major causes of morbidity and mortality among children less than 5 years of age.Entities:
Keywords: Children; Co-infection; Concurrent infection; Diarrhea; Infectious diarrhea; Odisha
Year: 2017 PMID: 28400860 PMCID: PMC5387278 DOI: 10.1186/s13099-017-0166-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gut Pathog ISSN: 1757-4749 Impact factor: 4.181
Detailed description of pathogen-specific polymerase chain reaction primers for their specific detection in stool
| Pathogen | Target gene | Primer name | Primer sequence (5′ to 3′) | Tm (°C) | Size (bp) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
| EAEC | EAEC pCVD432 | EAEC_pCVD432_F_11 | CTGGCGAAAGACTGTATCAT | 51 | 630 | [ |
| EAEC_pCVD432_R_12 | AAATGTATAGAAATCCGCTGTT | |||||
| EPEC | EPEC bfpA | EPEC_bfpA_F_9 | TTCTTGGTGCTTGCGTGTCTTTT | 53 | 367 | [ |
| EPEC_bfpA_F_10 | TTTTGTTTGTTGTATCTTTGTAA | |||||
| EPEC | EPEC eae gene | EPEC_eaeA_F | GACCCGGCACAAGCATAAGC | 59 | 384 | [ |
| EPEC_eaeA_R | CCACCTGCAGCAACAAGAGG | |||||
| STEC | EHEC vt1 | EHEC_vt2_R_7 | ACCGTTTTTCAGATTTT(G/A)CACATA | 52 | 298 | [ |
| EHEC_vt2_R_8 | TACACAGGAGCAGTTTCAGACAGT | |||||
| STEC | EHEC hlyA gene | EHEC_hlyA_F | GCATCATCAAGCGTACGTTCC | 57 | 534 | [ |
| EHEC_hlyA_R | AATGAGCCAAGCTGGTTAAGCT | 54 | 180 | |||
| STEC | stx1 |
| ATAAATCGCCATTCGTTGACTAC | [ | ||
|
| GGCACTGTCTGAAACTGCTCC | |||||
| STEC | stx2 |
| GGCACTGTCTGAAACTGCTCC | 56 | 255 | [ |
|
| TCGCCAGTTATCTGACATTCTG | |||||
| STEC | rfbE 157:H7 | O157_F | CGGACATCCATGTGATATGG | 52 | 259 | [ |
| O157_R | TTGCCTATGTACAGCTAATCC | |||||
| STEC | H7 FLIC | H7_FLIC-R_13 | GCGCTGTCGAGTTCTATCGAGC | 59 | 625 | [ |
| H7_FLIC-R_14 | CAACGGTGACTTATCGCCATTCC | |||||
| STEC | O111 rfb region | O111_F | TAGAGAAATTATCAAGTTAGTTCC | 49 | 406 | [ |
| O111_R | ATAGTTATGAACATCTTGTTTAGC | |||||
|
| ||||||
| ShET 1 |
| CAG CGT CTT TCA GCG ACA GTG TTT | 57 | 530 | [ | |
|
| AGC ATG ATA CTC AAC AGC CAG ACC | |||||
|
| ATA CTG GCT CCT GTC ATT CAC GGT | |||||
|
| GGA AGT GAC AGG GCA TTT GTG GAT | |||||
|
| ||||||
| Sdf I |
| TGT GTT TTA TCT GAT GCA AGA GG | 53 | 304 | [ | |
|
| TGA ACT ACG TTC GTT CTT CTG G | |||||
|
| ||||||
| Vc |
| GTTCGCGCTGGTGAAGGTTCA | 57 | 192 | [ | |
|
| TGGCATACCAGAGTCTTTCTGTG | |||||
|
| ||||||
| 18 s SSU rRNA locus | 18 s Morgan F | AGTGACAAGAAATAACAATACAGG | 60 | 298 | [ | |
| 18 s Morgan R | CCTGCTTTAAGCACTCTAATTTTC | |||||
|
| ||||||
| gdh gene | GDHeF | TCAAGCTYAAYGCYGGYTTGCGT | 57 | 432 | [ | |
| GDHiF | CAGTACAACTCYGCTCTCGG | |||||
| GDHiR | GTTRTCCTTGCACATCTCC | |||||
Frequencies of detection of etiological agents causing diarrhea in children
| Infectious agent detected | Method of detection | Frequency (%) of detection in |
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diarrheal group ( | Non-diarrheal group ( | |||
| DECa | PCR | 40 (30.7) | 10 (20.83) | 0.1935 |
| STEC | PCR | 14 (10.76) | 3 (6.25) | 0.3685 |
| EPEC | PCR | 28 (21.53) | 5 (10.41) | 0.0975 |
| EHEC | PCR | 1 (0.77) | 0 | 0.9434 |
| EAEC | PCR | 9 (6.9) | 1 (2.08) | 0.2412 |
| O 157 | PCR | 6 (4.61) | 1 (2.08) | 0.4525 |
|
| PCR | 31 (23.84) | 2 (4.16) | 0.0086* |
| Rotavirusb | Immunochromatography | 34 (26.15) | 0 | 0.0135* |
| Adenovirusb | Immunochromatography | 6 (4.61) | 1 (2.08) | 0.4525 |
|
| PCR | 4 (3.07) | 0 | 0.4091 |
|
| PCR | 1 (0.77) | 0 | 0.3652 |
* Statistically significant
a DEC includes all detected strains of diarrheagenic E. coli. Each of those strains were diagnosed using strain-specific primers as recommended in the previously published reports (see details as shown in Table 1)
b Rotavirus and Adenovirus were detected by Immunochromatography test using commercially procured kit (Combi-Strip C-1004, Coris Bioconcept ltd- Belgium)
Gender-wise distribution of incidences of infectious etiologies of diarrhea in children
| Total no of samples | Total no. with an infectious diagnosis | No (%) of cases tested positive for different etiologies | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Adenovirus | Rotavirus* |
|
| DEC | ||
| Male | |||||||
| 70 | 38 (54.28) | 3 (4.28) | 2 (2.85) | 28 (40) | 20 (28.57) | 1 (1.42) | 22 (31.42) |
| Female | |||||||
| 60 | 36 (60) | 1 (1.66) | 4 (4.66) | 6 (10) | 11 (18.33) | 0 (0) | 18 (30) |
| Statistics | |||||||
| | 0.5121 | 0.406 | 0.3158 | 0.0003 | 0.1749 | 0.5589 | 0.8604 |
| 95% CI (lower, upper) | 0.3937, 1.5919 | 0.2675, 26.0903 | 0.0727, 2.3316 | 2.2755, 15.8209 | 0.7734, 4.1051 | 0.1044, 65.3068 | 0.5062, 2.2595 |
| Odds ratio | 0.7917 | 2.642 | 0.4118 | 6 | 1.7818 | 2.6115 | 1.0694 |
Percentages are calculated based on the total number of male and female cases with symptoms of diarrhea as included in the present study (n = 70 and 60, respectively)
DEC diarrheagenic Escherichia coli
* Statistically significant
Location-wise distribution of incidences of infectious etiologies of diarrhea
| Total no of samples | Total no. with an infectious diagnosis | No (%) of cases tested positive for different etiologies | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Adenovirus* | Rotavirus* |
|
| DEC | ||
| Rural | |||||||
| 40 | 24 (60) | 3 (7.5) | 4 (10) | 6 (15) | 9 (22.5) | 0 (0) | 16 (40) |
| Urban | |||||||
| 90 | 50 (55.55) | 1 (1.11) | 2 (2.22) | 28 (31.11) | 22 (24.45) | 1 (1.11) | 24 (26.66) |
| Statistics | |||||||
| P value | 0.3190 | 0.02623* | 0.0260* | 0.0273* | 0.4055 | 0.2525 | 0.0650 |
| 95% CI (lower, upper) | 48.33, 65.12 | 0.9403, 7.907 | 1.921, 9.915 | 19.33, 34.34 | 17.3, 31.89 | 0.0, 4.657 | 23.46, 39.18 |
| Odds ratio | 1.2 | 7.216 | 4.889 | 0.3908 | 0.8974 | 0 | 1.833 |
Percentages are calculated based on the total number of rural and urban children with symptoms of diarrhea as included in the present study (n = 40 and 90, respectively)
DEC diarrheagenic Escherichia coli
* Statistically significant
Age group-wise distribution of incidences of different etiological agents causing diarrhea in children in diarrheal group
| No (%) of cases under age groups | Statistical analysis | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| <2 years ( | 2–5 years ( |
| Odds ratio (95% CI) | |
| At least one infectious etiology | 48 (58.53) | 26 (54.16) | 0.316 | 1.195 (0.582, 2.449) |
|
| 22 (26.82) | 18 (37.49) | 0.106 | 0.611 (0.285, 1.309) |
|
| 20 (24.39) | 11 (22.91) | 0.429 | 1.085 (0.468, 2.515) |
|
| 28 (34.14) | 6 (12.49) | 0.003** | 3.63 (1.377, 9.57) |
|
| 2 (2.43) | 4 (8.33) | 0.079 | 0.275 (0.048, 1.562) |
|
| 4 (4.87) | 0 | 0.076 | Undefined# |
|
| 1 (1.21) | 0 | 0.315 | Undefined# |
Percentages are calculated based on the total number of children with symptoms of diarrhea under <2 years and 2–5 years age groups (n = 82 and 48, respectively)
** Extremely statistically significant
Age group-wise distribution of incidences of different strains of Diarrheagenic E. coli causing diarrhea in children
| No (%) of cases under age groups | Statistical analysis | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| <2 years ( | 2–5 years ( |
| Odds ratio (95% CI) | |
|
| 7 (31.81) | 7 (38.88) | 0.328 | 0.733 (0.198–2.704) |
|
| 20 (90.9) | 8 (44.44) | 0.001** | 12.5 (2.226–70.18) |
|
| 1 (4.54) | 0 | 0.275 | Undefined# |
|
| 4 (18.18) | 2 (11.11) | 0.288 | 1.778 (0.286–1.04) |
|
| 5 (22.72) | 4 (22.22) | 0.635 | 1.56 (0.243–10.03) |
Percentages are calculated based on the total number of children with symptoms of diarrhea with detection of DEC under <2 years and 2–5 years age groups (n = 22 and 18, respectively)
** Extremely statistically significant
Fig. 1Bar graphs showing detection rates of infections with a single etiological agent among children presenting with diarrhea in comparison to non-diarrheal controls. In a 2 × 2 table analysis for comparison of proportions between cases and controls for cases with detection of a single infection, all expected values (row total X column total/grand total) were ≥5. So Chi-square analysis was recommended. Two-tailed p value by Mantel–Haenszel Chi-square test = 0.02680. For single infection with Rotavirus, at least one expected value (row total X column total/grand total) was <5. So Mid-P exact test was recommended rather than Chi-square (http://www.openepi.com). Two-tailed p value by Mid-P exact test = 0.005014. *Statistically significant.# DEC: any strain of diarrheagenic E. coli
Co-infection combinations with two or more infectious etiologies detected in diarrheagenic group vs controls
| Combinations of pathogens | Frequency (%) of detection cases ( | Frequency (%) of detection controls ( | Statistical analysis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Double infections | |||
| | 5 (3.84) | 0 | Two-tailed |
| Shigella+EPEC | 3 (2.3) | 0 | |
| | 1 (0.76) | 1 (2.08) | |
| EPEC+O157 | 1 (0.76) | 1 (2.08) | |
| Rotavirus+ | 7 (5.38) | 0 | |
| Adenovirus+EPEC | 2 (1.53) | 0 | |
| Adenovirus+ | 1 (0.76) | 0 | |
| Rotavirus+EPEC | 6 (4.61) | 0 | |
| | 2 (1.53) | 0 | |
| | 2 (1.53) | 0 | |
| Adenovirus+EAEC | 1 (0.76) | 0 | |
| Rotavirus+EAEC | 1 (0.76) | 0 | |
| EPEC+EAEC | 2 (1.53) | 0 | |
| EPEC+STEC | 0 | 1 (2.08) | |
| Double infection (total) | 33 (25.38) | 3 (6.25) | |
| Triple infections | |||
| | 2 (1.53) | 0 | Two-tailed |
| EPEC+EHEC+O157 | 1 (0.76) | 0 | |
| Rotavirus+ | 2 (1.53) | 0 | |
| Rotavirus+ | 1 (0.76) | 0 | |
| Rotavirus+ | 1 (0.76) | 0 | |
| Rotavirus+ | 1 (0.76) | 0 | |
| | 1 (0.76) | 0 | |
| Adenovirus+ | 1 (0.76) | 0 | |
| EAEC+O157+EAEC | 1 (0.76) | 0 | |
| Triple infection (total) | 10 (7.69) | 0 | |
| Adenovirus+ | 1 (0.76) | 0 | Two-tailed |
| Combination of Pathogens (more than three infections) | |||
Statistical analysis is shown considering only total number of cases and control subjects and respective co-isolation rates (double, triple, or more than three infections). In a 2 × 2 table analysis for comparison of proportions between cases and controls for double infections group, all expected values (row total X column total/grand total) were ≥5. So Chi-square analysis was recommended. For triple infections group and more than three infections one, at least one expected value (row total X column total/grand total) was <5. So Mid-P exact test was recommended rather than Chi-square (http://www.openepi.com)
n total number of subjects
* Statistically significant
Fig. 2Bar graphs comparing detection rates of mono-infections and co-infections among children of different age groups. Data were analyzed considering the cases with no infectious agent detection as control groups (30 cases under <2 years age group, and 26 cases under 2–5 years age group). In 2 × 2 table analysis for comparison of proportions between cases with detection of single/multiple infections in both age groups, all expected values (row total X column total/grand total) were ≥5. So Chi-square analysis was recommended. Two-tailed p value by Mantel–Haenszel Chi-square test = 0.0369 for single infections. Two-tailed p value was 0.2158 for multiple infections. When the data were compared between singe vs multiple infections under both age groups, the two-tailed p value was 0.3235. *Statistically significant
Comparison of the role of single infection vs multiple infections on average motions per day
| n | No. of motions/day (min–max) | Mean average no | SD | Two-sample independent t test | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single infection | 30 | 2–30 | 10.71 | 12.6 | Equal variance (0.001015)** |
| More than one infections | 44 | 12–25 | 17.5 | 3.2 | Unequal variance (0.006885)** |
n total number of cases
min minimum, max maximum
Two-sample independent t test using OpenEpi (Version 3), open source calculator revealed significantly higher number of motions per day among cases with multiple infections compared to those with single infection based on both equal variance (p = 0.001015) and unequal variance (p = 0.006885)
** Statistically extremely significant