5 research outputs found
A Prospective Longitudinal Cohort to Investigate the Effects of Early Life Giardiasis on Growth and All Cause Diarrhea
Background. Growth stunting in children under 2 years of age in low-income countries is common. Giardia is a ubiquitous pathogen in this age group but studies investigating Giardia's effect on both growth and diarrhea have produced conflicting results
Prevalence of anopheline species and their Plasmodium infection status in epidemic-prone border areas of Bangladesh
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Information related to malaria vectors is very limited in Bangladesh. In the changing environment and various <it>Anopheles </it>species may be incriminated and play role in the transmission cycle. This study was designed with an intention to identify anopheline species and possible malaria vectors in the border belt areas, where the malaria is endemic in Bangladesh.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p><it>Anopheles </it>mosquitoes were collected from three border belt areas (Lengura, Deorgachh and Matiranga) during the peak malaria transmission season (May to August). Three different methods were used: human landing catches, resting collecting by mouth aspirator and CDC light traps. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was done to detect <it>Plasmodium falciparum</it>, <it>Plasmodium vivax</it>-210 and <it>Plasmodium vivax</it>-247 circumsporozoite proteins (CSP) from the collected female species.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>A total of 634 female <it>Anopheles </it>mosquitoes belonging to 17 species were collected. <it>Anopheles vagus </it>(was the dominant species (18.6%) followed by <it>Anopheles nigerrimus </it>(14.5%) and <it>Anopheles philippinensis </it>(11.0%). Infection rate was found 2.6% within 622 mosquitoes tested with CSP-ELISA. Eight (1.3%) mosquitoes belonging to five species were positive for <it>P. falciparum</it>, seven (1.1%) mosquitoes belonging to five species were positive for <it>P. vivax </it>-210 and a single mosquito (0.2%) identified as <it>Anopheles maculatus </it>was positive for <it>P. vivax</it>-247. No mixed infection was found. Highest infection rate was found in <it>Anopheles karwari </it>(22.2%) followed by <it>An. maculatus </it>(14.3%) and <it>Anopheles barbirostris </it>(9.5%). Other positive species were <it>An. nigerrimus </it>(4.4%), <it>An. vagus </it>(4.3%), <it>Anopheles subpictus </it>(1.5%) and <it>An. philippinensis </it>(1.4%). <it>Anopheles vagus </it>and <it>An. philippinensis </it>were previously incriminated as malaria vector in Bangladesh. In contrast, <it>An. karwari</it>, <it>An. maculatus</it>, <it>An. barbirostris</it>, <it>An. nigerrimus </it>and <it>An. subpictus </it>had never previously been incriminated in Bangladesh.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Findings of this study suggested that in absence of major malaria vectors there is a possibility that other <it>Anopheles </it>species may have been playing role in malaria transmission in Bangladesh. Therefore, further studies are required with the positive mosquito species found in this study to investigate their possible role in malaria transmission in Bangladesh.</p
Evaluation of a Rapid Point-of-Care Fecal Antigen Detection Test for Entamoeba histolytica
Multisite Performance Evaluation of an Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay for Detection of Giardia, Cryptosporidium, and Entamoeba histolytica Antigens in Human Stool
ABSTRACT
A novel fecal antigen detection assay for fresh and frozen human samples that detects but does not differentiate
Giardia
spp,
Cryptosporidium
spp, and
Entamoeba histolytica
, the Tri-Combo parasite screen, was compared to three established enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs) at three international sites. It exhibited 97.9% sensitivity and 97.0% specificity, with positive and negative predictive values of 93.4% and 99.1%, respectively. The Tri-Combo test proved a reliable means to limit the use of individual parasite ELISAs to positive samples.
</jats:p
