Wong M S, Bundy D A, Golden M H
Tropical Metabolism Research Unit, Faculty of Medicine, University of the West Indies, Kingston, Jamaica.
Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg. 1991 Jan-Feb;85(1):89-91. doi: 10.1016/0035-9203(91)90172-u.
The rate of exposure to geohelminth infection of children living in 2 institutions in Jamaica, West Indies, was estimated from the product of their rates of ingestion of soil and the density of parasite eggs in the environment. The estimated mean rate of egg ingestion was 9-20 Ascaris lumbricoides eggs and 6-60 Trichuris trichiura eggs per year, although the distribution was highly overdispersed so that some individuals had an estimated annual exposure of several hundred eggs. The estimated individual rates of exposure correlated significantly with the observed worm burdens in children at one of the homes, but not at the other. It is suggested that the susceptibility of the children and the distribution of infective stages in the environment may be important in determining the relationship between exposure and the rate of acquisition of infection.
通过居住在西印度群岛牙买加两所机构中的儿童摄入土壤的速率与环境中寄生虫卵密度的乘积,估算了这些儿童感染土源性蠕虫的比率。估计每年摄入蛔虫卵的平均比率为9至20个,摄入鞭虫卵的平均比率为6至60个,尽管分布高度离散,以至于一些个体估计每年接触数百个虫卵。在其中一所机构中,估计的个体接触比率与观察到的儿童体内蠕虫负担显著相关,但在另一所机构中并非如此。有人提出,儿童的易感性和环境中感染阶段的分布可能对确定接触与感染获得率之间的关系很重要。