Department of Medical Parasitology, College of Health Sciences, Debre Markos University, P.O.Box: 269, Debre Markos, Ethiopia.
Department of Medical Parasitology, College of Medicine and Health Sciences, Bahir Dar University, Bahir Dar, Ethiopia.
BMC Infect Dis. 2019 Mar 8;19(1):239. doi: 10.1186/s12879-019-3865-y.
Malaria and leishmaniasis are the two largest parasitic killers in the world. Due togeographical overlap of these diseases, malaria-visceral leishmaniasis co-infections occur in large populations and exist in different areas even if they have been poorly investigated. The aim of this study was to determine malaria-visceral leishmaniasis co-infection and their associated factors among migrant laborers.
Community based cross-sectional study was conducted from October-December 2016 on migrant laborers who are residents of rural agricultural camp in West Armachiho district and involved in sesame and sorghum harvesting. Standardized questionnaire was used to collect socio-demographic data and risk factors. Capillary blood was collected for giemsa stained blood film examination to detect and identify Plasmodium parasites. Recombinant kinensin (rk39) antigen test was performed to detect anti-leishmania donovani antibody. Data was coded, entered, checked for completeness and analyzed using SPSS version-20 statistical software. Chi-square test was applied to show a significant association between variables. P-value < 0.05 was considered as statistically significant.
A total of 178 migrant laborers were included in this study. Of these, 74.2% belong to the age group 15-29; 61.2% come from lowland areas and 51.6% visit the area more than four times. Seroprevalence of visceral leishmaniasis was 9.6% (17/178); and 22.4% (40/178) of tested migrant laborers were found malaria infected. The overall prevalence of malaria-visceral leishmaniasis co-infection was 2.8%. Of the total migrant laborer, 47.8% used bed nets, of them 1.2% were malaria-visceral leishmaniasis co-infected; 72.5% used outdoor sites as usual sleeping site, among them 3.1% were malaria-visceral leishmaniasis co-infected; 60.1% were migrants, of which 2.8% were malaria-visceral leishmaniasis co-infected. All variables were not significantly associated with malaria-visceral leishmaniasis co-infection (P > 0.05).
Prevalence of malaria-visceral leishmaniasis co-infection was low and it is not significantly associated with residence, number of visits, bed net utilization and outdoor sleeping habit even if both diseases are prevalent in the study area.
疟疾和利什曼病是世界上两种最大的寄生虫杀手。由于这些疾病的地理位置重叠,疟疾-内脏利什曼病合并感染在大量人群中发生,并存在于不同地区,即使它们的研究很差。本研究的目的是确定移民工人中疟疾-内脏利什曼病合并感染及其相关因素。
2016 年 10 月至 12 月,对居住在西阿玛奇霍区农村农业营地并参与芝麻和高粱收割的移民工人进行了基于社区的横断面研究。使用标准化问卷收集社会人口统计学数据和危险因素。采集毛细血管血进行吉姆萨染色血片检查,以检测和识别疟原虫寄生虫。进行重组激酶(rk39)抗原检测,以检测抗杜氏利什曼原虫抗体。对数据进行编码、输入、检查完整性,并使用 SPSS 版本 20 统计软件进行分析。卡方检验用于显示变量之间的显著关联。P 值<0.05 被认为具有统计学意义。
本研究共纳入 178 名移民工人。其中,74.2%属于 15-29 岁年龄组;61.2%来自低地地区,51.6%访问该地区超过四次。内脏利什曼病的血清流行率为 9.6%(17/178);检测的移民工人中有 22.4%(40/178)患有疟疾感染。疟疾-内脏利什曼病合并感染的总患病率为 2.8%。在总移民工人中,47.8%使用蚊帐,其中 1.2%合并感染疟疾-内脏利什曼病;72.5%使用户外场所作为通常的睡眠场所,其中 3.1%合并感染疟疾-内脏利什曼病;60.1%是移民,其中 2.8%合并感染疟疾-内脏利什曼病。所有变量与疟疾-内脏利什曼病合并感染均无显著关联(P>0.05)。
疟疾-内脏利什曼病合并感染的流行率较低,即使在研究地区两种疾病都很流行,与居住地、访问次数、蚊帐使用和户外睡眠习惯也没有显著关联。