Literature DB >> 3369424

Illness and reservoirs associated with Giardia lamblia infection in rural Egypt: the case against treatment in developing world environments of high endemicity.

P S Sullivan1, H L DuPont, R R Arafat, S A Thornton, B J Selwyn, M A el Alamy, A M Zaki.   

Abstract

A longitudinal investigation of the health effects and reservoirs of Giardia was undertaken during 1984-1985 in 40 households located in the rural Nile Delta region of Egypt. Stool specimens obtained once weekly for six months from 2-4-year-old children were cyst- or trophozoite-positive in 42% of the 724 examined. Only one child remained Giardia-negative during the study. The mean duration of excretion in Giardia-positive children was seven and one-half weeks with a range of one to 17 weeks. Mucus was present in 52% of all stools collected, and fecal leukocytes were observed with surprising frequency in the absence of identifiable pathogens. Clinical symptoms of illness were frequently observed within a month before or after Giardia excretion in stool of children, but a statistical inference of association was not demonstrated. Seventeen per cent of 697 specimens obtained from their mothers were Giardia-positive for a mean duration of four weeks and a range of one to 18 weeks. A total of 962 specimens were collected from 13 species of household livestock. Giardia was detected in 22 specimens from cows, goats, sheep, and one duck. Giardia cysts were detected in three of 899 samples of household drinking water. The ubiquity of the protozoan as well as the failure to show an association between infection and symptomatic illness argue against the administration of Giardia-specific drugs to children in settings where the risk of reinfection is high and for whom intestinal insults are both varied and constant.

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Year:  1988        PMID: 3369424     DOI: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a114919

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Epidemiol        ISSN: 0002-9262            Impact factor:   4.897


  15 in total

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Review 3.  From Leningrad to the day-care center. The ubiquitous Giardia lamblia.

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Review 4.  Treatment of giardiasis.

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5.  Lack of an adverse effect of Giardia intestinalis infection on the health of Peruvian children.

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Journal:  Am J Epidemiol       Date:  2008-07-31       Impact factor: 4.897

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Authors:  Jacobien Veenemans; Theo Mank; Maarten Ottenhof; Amrish Baidjoe; Erasto V Mbugi; Ayse Y Demir; Jos P M Wielders; Huub F J Savelkoul; Hans Verhoef
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10.  High prevalence of Giardia duodenalis Assemblage B infection and association with underweight in Rwandan children.

Authors:  Ralf Ignatius; Jean Bosco Gahutu; Christian Klotz; Christian Steininger; Cyprien Shyirambere; Michel Lyng; Andre Musemakweri; Toni Aebischer; Peter Martus; Gundel Harms; Frank P Mockenhaupt
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2012-06-12
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