1. Seroprevalence of Toxocara canis infection among children in Swaziland, southern Africa.
- Author
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Liao CW, Sukati H, D'Lamini P, Chou CM, Liu YH, Huang YC, Chung MH, Mtsetfwa JS, Jonato J, Chiu WT, Chang PW, Du WY, Chan HC, Chu TB, Cheng HC, Su WW, Tu CC, Cheng CY, and Fan CK
- Subjects
- Adult, Age Distribution, Animals, Antigens, Helminth isolation & purification, Blotting, Western, Child, Child, Preschool, Cross Reactions, Dog Diseases parasitology, Dog Diseases transmission, Dogs, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay methods, Eswatini epidemiology, Female, Helminth Proteins isolation & purification, Humans, Male, Poverty Areas, Sanitation standards, Seroepidemiologic Studies, Toxocariasis immunology, Toxocariasis transmission, Urban Population, Antigens, Helminth immunology, Helminth Proteins immunology, Toxocara canis immunology, Toxocariasis epidemiology
- Abstract
As there appeared to be no data available on Toxocara canis infection in the children of Swaziland, a serological survey of T. canis infection was recently conducted among 92 children aged 3-12 years from rural slums in the low- and middle-veld. A child was considered seropositive if, in western blots based on the excretory-secretory antigens of larval T. canis, his or her serum gave a positive result when diluted 1 : 64. Forty-one (44.6%) of the children were found seropositive. There were no statistically significant differences in seroprevalence between the 49 boys and 43 girls investigated (46.9% v. 41.8%) or between the eight subjects aged 12 years and the 47 aged < or = 5 years (62.5% v. 38.3%); the corresponding odds ratios were 0.81 (95% confidence interval=0.36-1.86; P=0.62) and 2.69 (95% confidence interval=0.57-12.62; P=0.20), respectively. The 66 subjects from the middleveld were, however, significantly more likely to be seropositive than the 26 subjects from the lowveld (54.5% v. 19.2%; odds ratio=5.04, with a 95% confidence interval of 1.70-14.98; P<0.01). It seems likely that T. canis infection is common among the children who live in slums in Swaziland, particularly in the country's middleveld, probably as the result of poor hygiene and poor sanitation.
- Published
- 2010
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