1. Parasitic Disease Surveillance, Mississippi, USA
- Author
-
Samuel Jameson, Richard S. Bradbury, Paul Byers, Steven A. Williams, Gretchen Cooley, Sukwan Handali, Regina Galloway, Lisa Haynie, Meredith Lane, Lisa Stempak, Irene Arguello, John V. Williams, Nils Pilotte, Kathryn Hellmann, Bruce Brackin, Charlotte V. Hobbs, Michelle Tharp, Brian Kirmse, Fazlay Faruque, and Susan P. Montgomery
- Subjects
Microbiology (medical) ,Giardiasis ,Epidemiology ,Cryptosporidium ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 ,parasites ,Necator americanus ,toxocariasis ,Strongyloides stercoralis ,Microbiology ,Feces ,fluids and secretions ,Mississippi ,parasitic diseases ,Strongyloides ,medicine ,Parasitic Diseases ,Helminths ,Humans ,strongyloidiasis ,Toxocara ,biology ,cryptosporidiosis ,Dispatch ,Soil-transmitted helminths ,Giardia ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,United States ,zoonoses ,Infectious Diseases ,Strongyloidiasis ,pediatric ,Toxocariasis ,Medicine ,Parasitic Disease Surveillance, Mississippi, USA - Abstract
Surveillance for soil-transmitted helminths, strongyloidiasis, cryptosporidiosis, and giardiasis was conducted in Mississippi, USA. PCR performed on 224 fecal samples for all soil-transmitted helminths and on 370 samples for only Necator americanus and Strongyloides stercoralis identified 1 S. stercoralis infection. Seroprevalences were 8.8% for Toxocara, 27.4% for Cryptosporidium, 5.7% for Giardia, and 0.2% for Strongyloides parasites.
- Published
- 2021