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Intestinal symptoms and Blastocystis load in schoolchildren of Paranaguá Bay, Paraná, Brazil

The symptomatology of Blastocystis cannot be attributed to any particular subtype, although can be related to a high Blastocystis infection load. One stool sample from each of 217 schoolchildren of Vale de Sol Paranaguá Bay (Paraná, Brazil) was collected. Three milliliters of each fixed stool sample...

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Autores principales: Seguí, Raimundo, Klisiowicz, Debora, Oishi, Camila Yumi, Toledo, Rafael, Esteban, José Guillermo, Muñoz-Antoli, Carla
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Instituto de Medicina Tropical 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5738771/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29267594
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S1678-9946201759086
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author Seguí, Raimundo
Klisiowicz, Debora
Oishi, Camila Yumi
Toledo, Rafael
Esteban, José Guillermo
Muñoz-Antoli, Carla
author_facet Seguí, Raimundo
Klisiowicz, Debora
Oishi, Camila Yumi
Toledo, Rafael
Esteban, José Guillermo
Muñoz-Antoli, Carla
author_sort Seguí, Raimundo
collection PubMed
description The symptomatology of Blastocystis cannot be attributed to any particular subtype, although can be related to a high Blastocystis infection load. One stool sample from each of 217 schoolchildren of Vale de Sol Paranaguá Bay (Paraná, Brazil) was collected. Three milliliters of each fixed stool sample were processed applying the formalin-ether concentration technique. After obtaining the overall prevalence of intestinal parasites, quantification was carried out in Blastocystis positive samples. A total of 75/217 (34.6%) children suffered from intestinal symptoms (abdominal pain and/or persistent diarrhea), of whom 41.3% (31/75) presented moderate/heavy Blastocystis load with a statistically significant risk to present intestinal symptoms (OR 0.039 [0.006-0.15]; p<0.001) Moreover, those symptomatic schoolchildren monoparasitized only by Blastocystis (10/75, 13.3%), and those polyparasitized by Blastocystis with other non-pathogenic species (15/75, 20%) with moderate/heavy loads, also entail a statistically significant risk of intestinal symptomatology, both in monoparasitism (12%, OR 0.10 [0.004-0.63]; p=0.021) and in polyparasitism with a non-pathogenic parasite (18.6%, OR 0.059 [0.002-0.35]; p=0.001). For the first time in Brazil, using data from schoolchildren of Paranaguá Bay, we demonstrated that moderate/ heavy loads of Blastocystis could be related to intestinal symptoms.
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spelling pubmed-57387712018-01-02 Intestinal symptoms and Blastocystis load in schoolchildren of Paranaguá Bay, Paraná, Brazil Seguí, Raimundo Klisiowicz, Debora Oishi, Camila Yumi Toledo, Rafael Esteban, José Guillermo Muñoz-Antoli, Carla Rev Inst Med Trop Sao Paulo Brief Communication The symptomatology of Blastocystis cannot be attributed to any particular subtype, although can be related to a high Blastocystis infection load. One stool sample from each of 217 schoolchildren of Vale de Sol Paranaguá Bay (Paraná, Brazil) was collected. Three milliliters of each fixed stool sample were processed applying the formalin-ether concentration technique. After obtaining the overall prevalence of intestinal parasites, quantification was carried out in Blastocystis positive samples. A total of 75/217 (34.6%) children suffered from intestinal symptoms (abdominal pain and/or persistent diarrhea), of whom 41.3% (31/75) presented moderate/heavy Blastocystis load with a statistically significant risk to present intestinal symptoms (OR 0.039 [0.006-0.15]; p<0.001) Moreover, those symptomatic schoolchildren monoparasitized only by Blastocystis (10/75, 13.3%), and those polyparasitized by Blastocystis with other non-pathogenic species (15/75, 20%) with moderate/heavy loads, also entail a statistically significant risk of intestinal symptomatology, both in monoparasitism (12%, OR 0.10 [0.004-0.63]; p=0.021) and in polyparasitism with a non-pathogenic parasite (18.6%, OR 0.059 [0.002-0.35]; p=0.001). For the first time in Brazil, using data from schoolchildren of Paranaguá Bay, we demonstrated that moderate/ heavy loads of Blastocystis could be related to intestinal symptoms. Instituto de Medicina Tropical 2017-12-21 /pmc/articles/PMC5738771/ /pubmed/29267594 http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S1678-9946201759086 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License, which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Brief Communication
Seguí, Raimundo
Klisiowicz, Debora
Oishi, Camila Yumi
Toledo, Rafael
Esteban, José Guillermo
Muñoz-Antoli, Carla
Intestinal symptoms and Blastocystis load in schoolchildren of Paranaguá Bay, Paraná, Brazil
title Intestinal symptoms and Blastocystis load in schoolchildren of Paranaguá Bay, Paraná, Brazil
title_full Intestinal symptoms and Blastocystis load in schoolchildren of Paranaguá Bay, Paraná, Brazil
title_fullStr Intestinal symptoms and Blastocystis load in schoolchildren of Paranaguá Bay, Paraná, Brazil
title_full_unstemmed Intestinal symptoms and Blastocystis load in schoolchildren of Paranaguá Bay, Paraná, Brazil
title_short Intestinal symptoms and Blastocystis load in schoolchildren of Paranaguá Bay, Paraná, Brazil
title_sort intestinal symptoms and blastocystis load in schoolchildren of paranaguá bay, paraná, brazil
topic Brief Communication
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5738771/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29267594
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S1678-9946201759086
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