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Adenovirus Infection Is Predicted by Prolonged Duration of Diarrhea among Rotavirus-Vaccinated Children below Five Years of Age in Mwanza, Tanzania

Diarrhea is the commonest cause of morbidity and mortality in many resource-limited countries including Tanzania among children below five years of age. A significant number of diarrhea cases associated with severe dehydration are still being reported among children despite five years of rotavirus v...

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Autores principales: Msanga, Delfina R., Masoza, Tulla S., Mahamba, Dina, Kwiyolecha, Elizabeth, Rwezaula, Raphael, Charles, Happiness, Kessy, Regan, Silago, Vitus, Mshana, Stephan E., Mirambo, Mariam M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7519179/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33014079
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/9303216
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author Msanga, Delfina R.
Masoza, Tulla S.
Mahamba, Dina
Kwiyolecha, Elizabeth
Rwezaula, Raphael
Charles, Happiness
Kessy, Regan
Silago, Vitus
Mshana, Stephan E.
Mirambo, Mariam M.
author_facet Msanga, Delfina R.
Masoza, Tulla S.
Mahamba, Dina
Kwiyolecha, Elizabeth
Rwezaula, Raphael
Charles, Happiness
Kessy, Regan
Silago, Vitus
Mshana, Stephan E.
Mirambo, Mariam M.
author_sort Msanga, Delfina R.
collection PubMed
description Diarrhea is the commonest cause of morbidity and mortality in many resource-limited countries including Tanzania among children below five years of age. A significant number of diarrhea cases associated with severe dehydration are still being reported among children despite five years of rotavirus vaccine implementation in Tanzania necessitating the need to investigate other causes of diarrhea in this population. This study is aimed at determining the prevalence of human adenovirus infection and associated factors among rotavirus-vaccinated children with acute diarrhea in Mwanza, Tanzania. A cross-sectional study was conducted from June to August 2017 involving 137 children less than two years of age admitted with acute diarrhea in the health facilities located in Mwanza, Tanzania. Sociodemographic and other relevant information were collected using standardized rotavirus surveillance tool adopted from WHO. Stool specimens were collected and tested for human adenovirus antigen using immunochromatographic tests. Data were analyzed by using STATA version 13. The median age of enrolled children was 12 (IQR 8-17) months. The prevalence of human adenovirus was found to be 46 (33.6%, 95% CI: 25-41). By multivariable logistic regression analysis, only prolonged duration of diarrhea (OR: 1.619, 95% CI: 1.142-2.295, p = 0.007) was found to predict human adenovirus infection among rotavirus-vaccinated children with acute diarrhea. A significant proportion of rotavirus-vaccinated children with prolonged acute diarrhea have adenovirus infection. There is a need to consider other viral pathogens as potential cause of diarrhea especially in this postrotavirus vaccination period.
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spelling pubmed-75191792020-10-02 Adenovirus Infection Is Predicted by Prolonged Duration of Diarrhea among Rotavirus-Vaccinated Children below Five Years of Age in Mwanza, Tanzania Msanga, Delfina R. Masoza, Tulla S. Mahamba, Dina Kwiyolecha, Elizabeth Rwezaula, Raphael Charles, Happiness Kessy, Regan Silago, Vitus Mshana, Stephan E. Mirambo, Mariam M. Int J Pediatr Research Article Diarrhea is the commonest cause of morbidity and mortality in many resource-limited countries including Tanzania among children below five years of age. A significant number of diarrhea cases associated with severe dehydration are still being reported among children despite five years of rotavirus vaccine implementation in Tanzania necessitating the need to investigate other causes of diarrhea in this population. This study is aimed at determining the prevalence of human adenovirus infection and associated factors among rotavirus-vaccinated children with acute diarrhea in Mwanza, Tanzania. A cross-sectional study was conducted from June to August 2017 involving 137 children less than two years of age admitted with acute diarrhea in the health facilities located in Mwanza, Tanzania. Sociodemographic and other relevant information were collected using standardized rotavirus surveillance tool adopted from WHO. Stool specimens were collected and tested for human adenovirus antigen using immunochromatographic tests. Data were analyzed by using STATA version 13. The median age of enrolled children was 12 (IQR 8-17) months. The prevalence of human adenovirus was found to be 46 (33.6%, 95% CI: 25-41). By multivariable logistic regression analysis, only prolonged duration of diarrhea (OR: 1.619, 95% CI: 1.142-2.295, p = 0.007) was found to predict human adenovirus infection among rotavirus-vaccinated children with acute diarrhea. A significant proportion of rotavirus-vaccinated children with prolonged acute diarrhea have adenovirus infection. There is a need to consider other viral pathogens as potential cause of diarrhea especially in this postrotavirus vaccination period. Hindawi 2020-09-14 /pmc/articles/PMC7519179/ /pubmed/33014079 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/9303216 Text en Copyright © 2020 Delfina R. Msanga et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Msanga, Delfina R.
Masoza, Tulla S.
Mahamba, Dina
Kwiyolecha, Elizabeth
Rwezaula, Raphael
Charles, Happiness
Kessy, Regan
Silago, Vitus
Mshana, Stephan E.
Mirambo, Mariam M.
Adenovirus Infection Is Predicted by Prolonged Duration of Diarrhea among Rotavirus-Vaccinated Children below Five Years of Age in Mwanza, Tanzania
title Adenovirus Infection Is Predicted by Prolonged Duration of Diarrhea among Rotavirus-Vaccinated Children below Five Years of Age in Mwanza, Tanzania
title_full Adenovirus Infection Is Predicted by Prolonged Duration of Diarrhea among Rotavirus-Vaccinated Children below Five Years of Age in Mwanza, Tanzania
title_fullStr Adenovirus Infection Is Predicted by Prolonged Duration of Diarrhea among Rotavirus-Vaccinated Children below Five Years of Age in Mwanza, Tanzania
title_full_unstemmed Adenovirus Infection Is Predicted by Prolonged Duration of Diarrhea among Rotavirus-Vaccinated Children below Five Years of Age in Mwanza, Tanzania
title_short Adenovirus Infection Is Predicted by Prolonged Duration of Diarrhea among Rotavirus-Vaccinated Children below Five Years of Age in Mwanza, Tanzania
title_sort adenovirus infection is predicted by prolonged duration of diarrhea among rotavirus-vaccinated children below five years of age in mwanza, tanzania
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7519179/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33014079
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/9303216
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