Increase in the detection rate of viral and parasitic enteric pathogens among Egyptian children with acute diarrhea

Authors

  • Hanan El-Mohammady US Naval Medical Research Unit-No. 3, Cairo, Egypt
  • Adel Mansour US Naval Medical Research Unit-No. 3, Cairo, Egypt
  • Hind I. Shaheen US Naval Medical Research Unit-No. 3, Cairo, Egypt
  • Nagwa H. Henien Egyptian Ministry of Health, Cairo, Egypt
  • Mohamed S. Motawea US Naval Medical Research Unit-No. 3, Cairo, Egypt
  • Ismail Raafat US Naval Medical Research Unit-No. 3, Cairo, Egypt
  • Manal Moustafa US Naval Medical Research Unit-No. 3, Cairo, Egypt
  • Ibrahim A. Adib-Messih Novartis, Siena, Italy
  • Peter J. Sebeny US Naval Medical Research Unit-No. 3, Cairo, Egypt
  • Sylvia Y.N. Young US Naval Medical Research Unit-No. 3, Cairo, Egypt
  • John D. Klena US Naval Medical Research Unit-No. 3, Cairo, Egypt

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3855/jidc.2349

Keywords:

enteric viruses, enteric parasites, ELISA, Egyptian children, acute diarrhea

Abstract

Introduction: Acute diarrhea continues to be a major cause of morbidity and mortality in children from developing countries. Determination of the frequency of diarrhea in an area, along with the proportion of disease caused by specific enteric agents of different origins, is considered the first step in controlling diarrheal diseases.

Methodology: From 2005 to 2007, a hospital-based surveillance was conducted in two locations in Egypt to determine the causes of acute diarrhea in children younger than 5-years seeking treatment. Five additional enteric viral and parasitic pathogens were tested using commercially-available enzyme immunoassays (EIA) to re-evaluate the prevalence of diarrheal pathogens in undiagnosed cases.

Results: Adenovirus, astrovirus, norovirus and G. lamblia were detected as the sole pathogen in 2% (n=34), 3% (n=56), 9% (n=191) and 7% (n=146) of the cases, respectively. E. histolytica was never detected as the sole pathogen. The percentage of diarrheal cases with a known cause increased significantly, from 48% (n=1,006) to 74% (n=1,568) (P<0.0001).

Conclusion: In our study, the incorporation of immunoassays yielded useful data in identifying pathogens in previously pathogen-negative diarrhea cases.

Author Biographies

Hanan El-Mohammady, US Naval Medical Research Unit-No. 3, Cairo, Egypt

Medical Research Scientist, Bacterial and Parasitic Diagnose Research Program

Adel Mansour, US Naval Medical Research Unit-No. 3, Cairo, Egypt

Medical Research Scientist, Bacterial and Parasitic Diagnose Research Program

Hind I. Shaheen, US Naval Medical Research Unit-No. 3, Cairo, Egypt

Medical Research Scientist, Bacterial and Parasitic Diagnose Research Program

Nagwa H. Henien, Egyptian Ministry of Health, Cairo, Egypt

Central Public Health Laboratories

Mohamed S. Motawea, US Naval Medical Research Unit-No. 3, Cairo, Egypt

Medical Research Technologist, Bacterial and Parasitic Diagnose Research Program

Ismail Raafat, US Naval Medical Research Unit-No. 3, Cairo, Egypt

Medical Research Technologist, Bacterial and Parasitic Diagnose Research Program

Manal Moustafa, US Naval Medical Research Unit-No. 3, Cairo, Egypt

Medical Research Analyst, Bacterial and Parasitic Diagnose Research Program

Ibrahim A. Adib-Messih, Novartis, Siena, Italy

Novartis, Siena, Italy

Peter J. Sebeny, US Naval Medical Research Unit-No. 3, Cairo, Egypt

Deputy Head , Bacterial and Parasitic Diagnose Research Program

Sylvia Y.N. Young, US Naval Medical Research Unit-No. 3, Cairo, Egypt

Clinician, Bacterial and Parasitic Diagnose Research Program

John D. Klena, US Naval Medical Research Unit-No. 3, Cairo, Egypt

Research Scientist

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Published

2012-11-26

How to Cite

1.
El-Mohammady H, Mansour A, Shaheen HI, Henien NH, Motawea MS, Raafat I, Moustafa M, Adib-Messih IA, Sebeny PJ, Young SY, Klena JD (2012) Increase in the detection rate of viral and parasitic enteric pathogens among Egyptian children with acute diarrhea. J Infect Dev Ctries 6:774–781. doi: 10.3855/jidc.2349

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Original Articles