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Intestinal Helminth Infections in Ghanaian Children from the Ashanti Region between 2007 and 2008-A Retrospective Cross-Sectional Real-Time PCR-Based Assessment.

Authors :
Akenten CW
Weinreich F
Paintsil EK
Amuasi J
Fosu D
Loderstädt U
May J
Frickmann H
Dekker D
Source :
Tropical medicine and infectious disease [Trop Med Infect Dis] 2022 Nov 14; Vol. 7 (11). Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Nov 14.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

In spite of ongoing eradication programs, helminth infections are still a medical issue in Ghana. For follow-up assessments on the decline of regional helminth infections, historic baseline prevalence values obtained with standardized diagnostic procedures can be helpful. In this retrospective cross-sectional study, real-time PCR targeting the nematodes Ancylostoma spp. (ITS2), Ascaris lumbricoides (ITS1), Enterobius vermicularis (ITS1), Necator americanus (ITS2), Strongyloides stercoralis (18S rRNA) and Trichuris trichiura (18S rRNA), the trematodes Schistosoma spp. (ITS2) as well as the cestodes Hymenolepis nana (ITS1), Taenia saginata (ITS1) and Taenia solium (ITS1) was applied with 2046 DNA eluates from stool samples of Ghanaian children from the Ashanti region collected between 2007 and 2008 in order to retrospectively define prevalence values. The overall prevalence was low with 3.8% ( n = 77) and only 0.1% ( n = 2) double infections with helminths were recorded. The three most frequently detected enteric helminth species comprised 2% S. stercoralis ( n = 41), 0.8% H. nana ( n = 16), and 0.7% N. americanus ( n = 14), while only sporadic infection events were recorded for other helminth species comprising 0.1% E. vermicularis ( n = 2), 0.1% Schistosoma spp. ( n = 2), 0.1% T. saginata ( n = 1) and 0.1% T. trichiura ( n = 1). A. lumbricoides , Ancylostoma spp. and T. solium were not detected at all. In conclusion, the retrospective assessment suggests a low prevalence of enteric helminth infections in Ghanaian children from the Ashanti Region within the assessment period between 2007 and 2008.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2414-6366
Volume :
7
Issue :
11
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Tropical medicine and infectious disease
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
36422925
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed7110374