Publication | Closed Access
Seroepidemiologic Evaluation of Anti-Toxic and Anti-Colonization Factor Immunity against Infections by LT-Producing Escherichia coli in Rural Bangladesh
17
Citations
17
References
1990
Year
Rural BangladeshAntimicrobial SusceptibilityPathogen DetectionAge GroupPathogen TransmissionPathogenesisSerologic TestingKlebsiella PneumoniaeLt-etec DiarrheaGastrointestinal VirusLt-producing Escherichia ColiMicrobiologyInfection ControlSeroepidemiologic EvaluationMedicineClinical MicrobiologyEpidemiologyHealth Sciences
To evaluate serologic immunity against clinical infections by heat-labile enterotoxin-producing Escherichia coli (LT-ETEC) in rural Bangladesh, 124 children and adult women with LT-ETEC diarrhea (cases) were compared with 347 age-matched community controls. In paired acute-convalescent sera from the cases, IgG anti-CFA I and anti-CFA II antibody titers increased eight-to ninefold after infection by LT-ETEC with the homologous CFA, and IgG anti-LT antibody titers increased fourfold for all LT-ETEC infections. Anti-CFA and anti-LT titers peaked in controls aged 12-23 months, the age group with the highest incidence of ETEC infections. However, antibody titers were similar in acute sera from cases and in sera from controls. Although serum IgG anti-CFA and anti-LT antibodies rose in response to LT-ETEC infections and paralleled the age-specific incidence of ETEC in the community, these antibodies were not associated with a lower risk of LT-ETEC diarrhea.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1