Gatei Wangeci, Wamae Claire N, Mbae Cecilia, Waruru Anthony, Mulinge Erastus, Waithera Tabitha, Gatika Simon M, Kamwati Stanely K, Revathi Gunturu, Hart Charles A
Centre for Microbiology Research, Kenya Medical Research Institute, Nairobi, Kenya.
Am J Trop Med Hyg. 2006 Jul;75(1):78-82.
Cryptosporidium parasites are leading causes of enteric disease, especially in children. A prospective survey on the prevalence of cryptosporidiosis in children less than five years of age was undertaken at six microbiology laboratories in Kenya on fecal samples submitted for routine parasite and ova investigations. Analysis of 4,899 samples over a two-year study period showed an overall prevalence of cryptosporidiosis of 4% that was highest between November to February. Investigations on the nature of enteric diseases prompting ova and cyst examination requests showed 66.4% had acute diarrhea, 9% had persistent diarrhea, and 21% had recurrent diarrhea. The main symptoms were abdominal pain (51.1%), vomiting (51.6%), and abdominal swelling (11%). The prevalence of cryptosporidiosis was highest among children 13-24 months of age (5.2%) and least among those 48-60 months of age (2%). No significant differences were observed by sex but vomiting was slightly higher in males than in females (65% males and 52% females; P = 0.07). Cryptosporidiosis was significantly associated with persistent diarrhea (P = 0.0001, odds ratio [OR] = 2.193, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.463-3.29), vomiting (P = 0.0273, OR = 1.401, 95% CI = 1.04-1.893), and abdominal swelling (P = 0.0311, OR = 1.56, 95% CI = 1.04-2.34). Genotype analysis based on polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism of the 18S rRNA gene fragment showed that 87% (153 of 175) of the Cryptosporidium isolates were C. hominis, 9% (15 of 175) were C. parvum, and remaining 4% were C. canis, C. felis, C. meleagridis, and C. muris. The most common protozoa in coinfected patients were Entamoeba histolytica/E. dispar, E. coli, and Giardia intestinalis (6%, 5%, and 2%, respectively). Our results show that Cryptosporidium is among the most common protozoan parasites in children with enteric diseases and that anthroponotic species are the leading cause of human cryptosporidiosis in Kenya, which suggests that human-to-human transmission is the main mode of spread.
隐孢子虫是肠道疾病的主要病因,尤其是在儿童中。肯尼亚的六个微生物实验室对提交进行常规寄生虫和虫卵检查的粪便样本,开展了一项关于五岁以下儿童隐孢子虫病患病率的前瞻性调查。在为期两年的研究期内,对4899份样本的分析显示,隐孢子虫病的总体患病率为4%,在11月至2月期间最高。对促使进行虫卵和囊肿检查请求的肠道疾病性质的调查显示,66.4%的患者患有急性腹泻,9%患有持续性腹泻,21%患有复发性腹泻。主要症状为腹痛(51.1%)、呕吐(51.6%)和腹部肿胀(11%)。隐孢子虫病患病率在13至24个月大的儿童中最高(5.2%),在48至60个月大的儿童中最低(2%)。未观察到性别之间的显著差异,但男性呕吐率略高于女性(男性为65%,女性为52%;P = 0.07)。隐孢子虫病与持续性腹泻(P = 0.0001,优势比[OR] = 2.193,95%置信区间[CI] = 1.463 - 3.29)、呕吐(P = 0.0273,OR = 1.401,95% CI = 1.04 - 1.893)和腹部肿胀(P = 0.0311,OR = 1.56,95% CI = 1.04 - 2.34)显著相关。基于18S rRNA基因片段的聚合酶链反应 - 限制性片段长度多态性的基因型分析表明,87%(175份样本中的153份)的隐孢子虫分离株为微小隐孢子虫,9%(175份样本中的15份)为牛隐孢子虫,其余4%为犬隐孢子虫、猫隐孢子虫、火鸡隐孢子虫和鼠隐孢子虫。合并感染患者中最常见的原生动物是溶组织内阿米巴/迪氏内阿米巴、结肠内阿米巴和贾第虫(分别为6%、5%和2%)。我们的结果表明,隐孢子虫是肠道疾病儿童中最常见的原生动物寄生虫之一,人兽共患种类是肯尼亚人类隐孢子虫病的主要病因,这表明人际传播是主要传播方式。