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Giardia duodenalis assemblage, clinical presentation and markers of intestinal inflammation in Brazilian children

158

Citations

29

References

2008

Year

Abstract

Data on the relationship between the two genotypes of Giardia duodenalis that infect humans, assemblages A and B, their clinical presentation and intestinal inflammation are limited. We analyzed 108 stool samples previously collected for a diarrhoeal study among Brazilian children, representing 71 infections in 47 children. Assemblage B was most prevalent, accounting for 43/58 (74.1%) infections, while assemblage A accounted for 9/58 (15.5%) infections and 6/58 (10.3%) infections were mixed (contained both assemblage A and B). There was no significant difference in diarrhoeal symptoms experienced during assemblage A, B or mixed infections. Children with assemblage B demonstrated greater variability in G. duodenalis cyst shedding but at an overall greater level (n=43, mean 3.6 x 10(5), range 5.3 x 10(2)-2.5 x 10(6)cysts/ml) than children infected with assemblage A (n=9, mean 1.4 x 10(5), range 1.5 x 10(4)-4.6 x 10(5)cysts/ml; P=0.009). Children with mixed infections shed more cysts (mean 8.3 x 10(5), range 3.1 x 10(4)-2.8 x 10(6)cysts/ml) than children with assemblage A or B alone (P=0.069 and P=0.046 respectively). This higher rate of cyst shedding in children with assemblage B may promote its spread, accounting for its increased incidence. Additionally, second and third infections had decreasing faecal lactoferrin, suggesting some protection against severity, albeit not against infection, by prior infection.

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