Singh J, Prakash C, Gupta R S, Bora D, Jain D C, Datta K K
National Institute of Communicable Diseases (NICD), Delhi, India.
Bull World Health Organ. 1997;75(5):463-8.
In a community study during a reference period of 1 year, 192 cases of jaundice were detected in an urban population of 69,440 in Alwar, Rajasthan. Detected by paramedics and confirmed by physicians, these cases gave an annual incidence of 2.76 (95% CI: 2.37-3.15) per 1000 population. At least one of these patients died, giving a case fatality ratio of 0.6%. The jaundice cases occurred in all areas investigated, and affected all socioeconomic strata. About 94% of the affected families had only single cases. Although cases occurred throughout the year, more than 59% occurred during June-September, which are the summer and monsoon months. The incidence was highest (5.23 per 1000) among under-5-year-olds and declined progressively and significantly thereafter. Males had a higher incidence than females at all ages; the differences were not significant. Blood samples from 56 cases who had jaundice in the last 3 months of the reference period were tested for markers of viral hepatitis. Of these, 18 (32.1%), 1 (1.8%), 0, 2 (3.6%), and 4 (7.1%) were found to have hepatitis A, B, C, D and E, respectively. The etiology of the remaining 31 cases (55%) could not be established; previously, they would have been included in the NANB (non-A, non-B) category, inflating its proportion. Hepatitis A (HA) was the predominant type; being comparatively mild, it is perhaps underrepresented in hospital-based data. Many HA cases were in adults, which may be the beginning of an age shift of HA to the right owing to improvements in living standards of the study population. Five cases were carriers of hepatitis B virus (HBV), indicating the importance of HBV infection in India as well. Finally, the study found the annual incidence of laboratory-supported cases of viral hepatitis to be 1.24 (95% CI: 0.98-1.5) per 1000 population, which suggests that it is a major public health problem in India.
在一项为期1年的参考期社区研究中,在拉贾斯坦邦阿尔瓦尔市69440人的城市人口中检测到192例黄疸病例。这些病例由医护人员检测并经医生确诊,年发病率为每1000人2.76例(95%置信区间:2.37 - 3.15)。这些患者中至少有1人死亡,病死率为0.6%。黄疸病例出现在所有调查区域,且影响到所有社会经济阶层。约94%的受影响家庭仅有单个病例。尽管病例全年都有发生,但超过59%发生在6月至9月,即夏季和季风季节。5岁以下儿童的发病率最高(每1000人5.23例),此后逐渐显著下降。各年龄段男性的发病率均高于女性;差异不显著。对参考期最后3个月出现黄疸的56例患者的血样进行了病毒性肝炎标志物检测。其中,分别发现18例(32.1%)、1例(1.8%)、0例、2例(3.6%)和4例(7.1%)患有甲型、乙型、丙型、丁型和戊型肝炎。其余31例(55%)的病因无法确定;以前,这些病例会被归入非甲非乙型肝炎类别,从而夸大了其比例。甲型肝炎(HA)是主要类型;由于病情相对较轻,在基于医院的数据中可能未得到充分体现。许多甲型肝炎病例发生在成年人中,这可能是由于研究人群生活水平提高导致甲型肝炎发病年龄向右偏移的开端。5例为乙型肝炎病毒(HBV)携带者,这也表明HBV感染在印度同样重要。最后,研究发现病毒性肝炎实验室确诊病例的年发病率为每1000人1.24例(95%置信区间:0.98 - 1.5),这表明它是印度的一个主要公共卫生问题。