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   Natural History of Cryptosporidiosis in a Longitudinal Study of Slum-Dwelling Bangladeshi Children: Association with Severe Malnutrition  
   
نویسنده korpe p.s. ,haque r. ,gilchrist c. ,valencia c. ,niu f. ,lu m. ,ma j.z. ,petri s.e. ,reichman d. ,kabir m. ,duggal p. ,petri w.a.
منبع plos neglected tropical diseases - 2016 - دوره : 10 - شماره : 5
چکیده    Background: cryptosporidiosis is a common cause of infectious diarrhea in young children worldwide,and is a significant contributor to under-five mortality. current treatment options are limited in young children. in this study,we describe the natural history of cryptosporidium spp. infection in a birth cohort of children in bangladesh and evaluate for association with malnutrition. methodology/principal findings: this is a longitudinal birth cohort study of 392 slum-dwelling bangladeshi children followed over the first two years of life from 2008 to 2014. children were monitored for diarrheal disease,and stool was tested for intestinal protozoa. anthropometric measurements were taken at 3-month intervals. a subset of cryptosporidium positive stools were genotyped for species and revealed that c. hominis was isolated from over 90% of samples. in the first two years of life,77% of children experienced at least one infection with cryptosporidium spp. non-diarrheal infection (67%) was more common than diarrheal infection (6.3%) although 27% of children had both types of infection. extreme poverty was associated with higher rates of infection (chi-square,49.7% vs 33.3%,p = 0.006). malnutrition was common in this cohort,56% of children had stunted growth by age two. children with cryptosporidium spp. infection had a greater than 2-fold increased risk of severe stunting at age two compared to uninfected children (odds ratio 2.69,95% ci 1.17,6.15,p = 0.019) independent of sex,income,maternal body-mass index,maternal education and weight for age adjusted z (waz) score at birth. conclusions/significance: cryptosporidium infection is common (77%) in this cohort of slum-dwelling bangladeshi children,and both non-diarrheal and diarrheal infections are significantly associated with a child’s growth at 2 years of age. © 2016 korpe et al.
آدرس department of epidemiology,johns hopkins school of public health,baltimore,md, United States, international centre for diarrhoeal disease research,dhaka, Bangladesh, department of medicine,division of infectious diseases,university of virginia,charlottesville,va, United States, department of epidemiology,johns hopkins school of public health,baltimore,md, United States, department of statistics,university of virginia,charlottesville,va, United States, department of statistics,university of virginia,charlottesville,va, United States, division of biostatistics,department of public health sciences,university of virginia,charlottesville,va, United States, department of animal and veterinary sciences,cummings school of veterinary medicine,tufts university,north grafton,ma, United States, emory university school of medicine,atlanta,ga, United States, international centre for diarrhoeal disease research,dhaka, Bangladesh, department of epidemiology,johns hopkins school of public health,baltimore,md, United States, jr.,department of medicine,division of infectious diseases,university of virginia,charlottesville,va, United States
 
     
   
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