| Literature DB >> 31640585 |
Lucia Fontanelli Sulekova1, Simona Gabrielli2,3, Federica Furzi4, Giovanni Luigi Milardi4, Elisa Biliotti1, Maurizio De Angelis1, Giancarlo Iaiani1, Caterina Fimiani4, Myriam Maiorano1, Simonetta Mattiucci5,4, Gloria Taliani1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Blastocystis is one of the most common intestinal protozoa in human faecal samples with uncertain impact on public health. Studies on the prevalence of Blastocystis in HIV-positive patients are limited and dated.Entities:
Keywords: Blastocystis; HIV; Italy; PCR; Subtype
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31640585 PMCID: PMC6805496 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-019-4537-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Epidemiological, demographic, immunologic and virological characteristics of the enrolled patients (N = 156). A total of N = 23 were naïve and N = 133 on ART
| Study population | N (%) |
|---|---|
| Gender, male | 117 (75%) |
| Age, years (mean ± SD) | 47.05 ± 12.38 |
| Foreign origin | 39 (25%) |
| MSM | 50 (32.0%) |
| Domestic animals | 74 (47.4%) |
| Travels | 67 (42.9%) |
| CD4 count, cells/ml, mean ± SD | 655.04 ± 381.56 |
| HIV-RNA (< 37 copies/ml) | 112 (71.8%) |
| Naïve subjects | 23 (14.74%) |
| 2NRTI + NNRTI | 35 (26.3%) |
| 2NRTI + IP/r | 34 (25.6%) |
| 2NRTI + INI | 36 (27.1%) |
| Dual therapy | 28 (21%) |
Fig. 1Bayesian inference (BI) and Neighbour-Joining (NJ) phylogenetic combined tree showing the relationships among Blastocystis-SSU rRNA gene sequences from this study (Bh) and published Blastocystis-subtypes ST1, ST2, ST3, ST4 (GenBank accession numbers indicated in the tree), carried out by using MrBayes3.1 and PAUP4 respectively, as above described. The number of sequences from each isolate (Bh) was reported in the brackets. Bootstrap values and posterior probabilities, respectively, are reported at the nodes; B. lapemi and B. pythoni (accession no. AY590115 and KU146575, respectively) were used as outgroups
Comparison of epidemiological, demographic, immunologic and virological characteristics between Blastocystis- carrier (N = 39) and Blastocystis-free (N = 117) patients. Significant results were marked with *
| Gender, male | 33 (82.0%) | 84 (72.6%) | 0.289 |
| Age, years (mean ± SD) | 44.71 ± 11.33 | 47.05 ± 12.37 | 0.06 |
| Foreign origin | 15 (38.46%) | 25 (21.36%) | 0.138 |
| MSM | 19 (48.71%) | 31 (26.49%) | 0.037* |
| Domestic animals | 18 (46.15%) | 56 (47.86%) | 0.721 |
| Travels | 20 (51.28%) | 47 (40.17%) | 0.296 |
| CD4 count, cells/ml, mean ± SD | 637.43 ± 263.32 | 660.90 ± 414.35 | 0.823 |
| CD4 count > 500 cells/ml | 28 (71.79%) | 69 (58.97%) | 0.484 |
| CD4 count 200–500 cells/ml | 8 (20.51%) | 33 (28.20%) | |
| CD4 count < 200 cells/ml | 3 (7.69%) | 15 (12.82%) | |
| HIV-RNA (< 37 copies/ml) | 32 (82.05%) | 80 (68.37%) | 0.257 |
| Naïve subjects | 5 (12.82%) | 18 (15.38%) | 0.765 |
| 2NRTI + NNRTI | 9 (23.07%) | 26 (22.22%) | |
| 2NRTI + IP/r | 7 (17.94%) | 27 (23.07%) | |
| 2NRTI + INI | 12 (30.76%) | 24 (20.51%) | |
| Dual therapy | 6 (15.38%) | 22 (18.80%) |
Gastrointestinal symptoms observed in Blastocystis- carrier (N = 39) and Blastocystis-free (N = 117) patients. Significant results were marked with *
| Symptoms | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Abdominal pain | 7 (17.94%) | 26 (22.22%) | 0.836 |
| Diarrhoea | 10 (25.64%) | 20 (17.09%) | 0.283 |
| Flatulence | 12 (30.76%) | 17 (14.52%) | 0.024* |
| Nausea | 3 (7.69%) | 6 (5.12%) | 0.887 |
| Poor appetite | 5 (12.82%) | 10 (8.54%) | 0.180 |
| Weight loss | 3 (7.69%) | 10 (8.54%) | 0.658 |