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A Prospective Longitudinal Cohort to Investigate the Effects of Early Life Giardiasis on Growth and All Cause Diarrhea

Authors :
Jeffrey R, Donowitz
Masud, Alam
Mamun, Kabir
Jennie Z, Ma
Forida, Nazib
James A, Platts-Mills
Luther A, Bartelt
Rashidul, Haque
William A, Petri
Source :
Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America. 63(6)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Growth stunting in children under 2 years of age in low-income countries is common. Giardia is a ubiquitous pathogen in this age group but studies investigating Giardia's effect on both growth and diarrhea have produced conflicting results.We conducted a prospective longitudinal birth cohort study in Dhaka, Bangladesh, with monthly Giardia and continuous diarrheal surveillance.629 children were enrolled within the first 72 hours of life, and 445 completed 2 years of the study. 12% of children were stunted at birth with 57% stunted by 2 years. 7% of children had a Giardia positive surveillance stool in the first 6 months of life, whereas 74% had a positive stool by 2 years. The median time to first Giardia positive surveillance stool was 17 months. Presence of Giardia in a monthly surveillance stool within the first 6 months of life decreased length-for-age Z score at 2 years by 0.4 (95% confidence interval, -.80 to -.001; P value .05) whereas total number of Giardia positive months over the 2-year period of observation did not. Neither variable was associated with weight-for-age Z score at 2 years. In our model to examine predictors of diarrhea only exclusive breastfeeding was significantly associated with decreased diarrhea (P value.001). Concomitant giardiasis was neither a risk factor nor protective.Early life Giardia was a risk factor for stunting at age 2 but not poor weight gain. Presence of Giardia neither increased nor decreased odds of acute all cause diarrhea.

Details

ISSN :
15376591
Volume :
63
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........b1df763afac71a2fdc8c7315ec6c2cd6