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Intestinal Helminth Infections and Associated Risk Factors among School-Aged Children of Bamendjou Community, West Region of Cameroon

BACKGROUND: Infection with intestinal nematodes is of major public health concern worldwide, and school-age children and pregnant women are the principal victims. The present study was undertaken to provide baseline information on the status of gastrointestinal nematodes among school-age children in...

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Autores principales: Ruth, Matsinkou Mba Rosine, Cedric, Yamssi, Malla, Mbong Erica, Nadia, Noumedem Anangmo Christelle, Aime, Tateng Ngouateu, Leonelle, Megwi, Payne, Vincent Khan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8088379/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33981454
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/6665586
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author Ruth, Matsinkou Mba Rosine
Cedric, Yamssi
Malla, Mbong Erica
Nadia, Noumedem Anangmo Christelle
Aime, Tateng Ngouateu
Leonelle, Megwi
Payne, Vincent Khan
author_facet Ruth, Matsinkou Mba Rosine
Cedric, Yamssi
Malla, Mbong Erica
Nadia, Noumedem Anangmo Christelle
Aime, Tateng Ngouateu
Leonelle, Megwi
Payne, Vincent Khan
author_sort Ruth, Matsinkou Mba Rosine
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Infection with intestinal nematodes is of major public health concern worldwide, and school-age children and pregnant women are the principal victims. The present study was undertaken to provide baseline information on the status of gastrointestinal nematodes among school-age children in Bamendjou. Material and Methods. Four hundred and ninety-three (493) stool samples were collected from school children in six (6) different schools (two nursery, two primary, and two secondary schools). Qualitative and quantitative analyses of stool samples were done using the simple flotation and McMaster count techniques, respectively. RESULTS: Among the 493 participants, 57 (11.6%) stool samples were positive for at least one nematode species. Four nematodes are as follows: Ascaris sp., Trichuris sp., hookworms, and Strongyloides sp. with respective prevalence and intensities of infection of 6.1% and 2260 ± 6377.98, 3.4% and 223.53 ± 264.054, 3.0% and 416.67 ± 427.061, and 0.2% and 200 ± 00, respectively. The data on the prevalence of nematodes with respect to sex showed that females (13.1%) were more infected than males (12.2%) (P > 0.05). Furthermore, with respect to age, older children were more infected than younger ones. Cases of double parasitism were encountered with a prevalence of 1.2%. According to the fecal concentration of eggs, 61.90% of the infections were light. Risk factors such as drinking water from streams and not wearing shoes all the time were significant with infections. CONCLUSION: The relatively low overall prevalence (11.6%) obtained in this study shows that the national deworming campaign is proving effective, though a more holistic approach is required to prevent infections from bouncing back after such campaigns.
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spelling pubmed-80883792021-05-11 Intestinal Helminth Infections and Associated Risk Factors among School-Aged Children of Bamendjou Community, West Region of Cameroon Ruth, Matsinkou Mba Rosine Cedric, Yamssi Malla, Mbong Erica Nadia, Noumedem Anangmo Christelle Aime, Tateng Ngouateu Leonelle, Megwi Payne, Vincent Khan J Parasitol Res Research Article BACKGROUND: Infection with intestinal nematodes is of major public health concern worldwide, and school-age children and pregnant women are the principal victims. The present study was undertaken to provide baseline information on the status of gastrointestinal nematodes among school-age children in Bamendjou. Material and Methods. Four hundred and ninety-three (493) stool samples were collected from school children in six (6) different schools (two nursery, two primary, and two secondary schools). Qualitative and quantitative analyses of stool samples were done using the simple flotation and McMaster count techniques, respectively. RESULTS: Among the 493 participants, 57 (11.6%) stool samples were positive for at least one nematode species. Four nematodes are as follows: Ascaris sp., Trichuris sp., hookworms, and Strongyloides sp. with respective prevalence and intensities of infection of 6.1% and 2260 ± 6377.98, 3.4% and 223.53 ± 264.054, 3.0% and 416.67 ± 427.061, and 0.2% and 200 ± 00, respectively. The data on the prevalence of nematodes with respect to sex showed that females (13.1%) were more infected than males (12.2%) (P > 0.05). Furthermore, with respect to age, older children were more infected than younger ones. Cases of double parasitism were encountered with a prevalence of 1.2%. According to the fecal concentration of eggs, 61.90% of the infections were light. Risk factors such as drinking water from streams and not wearing shoes all the time were significant with infections. CONCLUSION: The relatively low overall prevalence (11.6%) obtained in this study shows that the national deworming campaign is proving effective, though a more holistic approach is required to prevent infections from bouncing back after such campaigns. Hindawi 2021-04-23 /pmc/articles/PMC8088379/ /pubmed/33981454 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/6665586 Text en Copyright © 2021 Matsinkou Mba Rosine Ruth 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
Ruth, Matsinkou Mba Rosine
Cedric, Yamssi
Malla, Mbong Erica
Nadia, Noumedem Anangmo Christelle
Aime, Tateng Ngouateu
Leonelle, Megwi
Payne, Vincent Khan
Intestinal Helminth Infections and Associated Risk Factors among School-Aged Children of Bamendjou Community, West Region of Cameroon
title Intestinal Helminth Infections and Associated Risk Factors among School-Aged Children of Bamendjou Community, West Region of Cameroon
title_full Intestinal Helminth Infections and Associated Risk Factors among School-Aged Children of Bamendjou Community, West Region of Cameroon
title_fullStr Intestinal Helminth Infections and Associated Risk Factors among School-Aged Children of Bamendjou Community, West Region of Cameroon
title_full_unstemmed Intestinal Helminth Infections and Associated Risk Factors among School-Aged Children of Bamendjou Community, West Region of Cameroon
title_short Intestinal Helminth Infections and Associated Risk Factors among School-Aged Children of Bamendjou Community, West Region of Cameroon
title_sort intestinal helminth infections and associated risk factors among school-aged children of bamendjou community, west region of cameroon
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8088379/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33981454
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/6665586
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