Publication | Open Access
Population‐Based Surveillance and a Case‐Control Study of Risk Factors for Endemic Lymphocutaneous Sporotrichosis in Peru
94
Citations
28
References
2003
Year
Parasitic DiseasePreventive MedicineEnvironmental ExposureGlobal HealthEnvironmental HealthCase‐control StudyInternational HealthDisease ControlSchistosomiasisLymphatic FilariasisPopulation-based SurveillanceEndemic Lymphocutaneous SporotrichosisPublic HealthMedicineRisk FactorsEpidemiologyParasitology
Population-based surveillance and a case-control study were conducted in Abancay, Peru, to estimate the burden of disease and to determine risk factors for sporadic lymphocutaneous sporotrichosis (LS). Laboratory records from local hospitals were reviewed for the years of 1997 and 1998, and prospective surveillance was conducted for the period of September 1998 through September 1999. A case-control study was conducted with 2 matched control subjects per case patient. The mean annual incidence was 98 cases per 100,000 persons. Children had an incidence 3 times higher than that for adults and were more likely to have LS lesions on the face and neck. Identified risk factors included owning a cat, playing in crop fields, having a dirt floor in the house, working mainly outdoors, and having a ceiling made of raw wood or conditions associated with a lower socioeconomic status. Decreased environmental exposure, such wearing protective clothing during construction activities for adults or limiting contact with cats and soil for children, and improvements in living spaces may decrease the incidence of LS.
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