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Journal of the Egyptian Society of Parasitology 2010-Dec

Role of parasites among chronic diarrheic patients.

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Ahmed M S Bayoumy
Khairy Abd El Hameed Mohammed
Samir Abd El Razek Shahat
Mohammed M M Ghannam
Mustafa El Shahat Mustafa Gazy

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Abstracto

This work studied the role of parasitic infection among 85 chronic diarrheic patients in Delta region and cross-matched 20 normal controls. They were subjected to thorough history taking and clinical examination and stool examination by direct smear, formol-ether concentration, simple sedimentation, simple floatation and Kato-katz thick smear. Questionnaire sheet was obtained for each case included personal history, complaint, present as well as past history and family history. The results showed that 67.1% of patients suffered from parasites versus 20% in controls. They included giardiasis mixed with hymenolepiasis nana, ameobiasis, ascariaisis, S. mansoni, heterophyiasis, B. homninis, Taenia spp and enterobiasis respectively. Single infection represented 54.2 %, while mixed ones were 12.9% of total chronic diarrhea cases and non parasitic causes were responsible for 32.9%. Mixed infection was common in A. lumbricoides with E. histolytica (18.18%) and H. nana with G. lambia (27.28%). The diarrhea duration was longer in mixed infections (3 months), E. histolytica (2 months) and H. nana (1.5 months). Commonest symptom other than diarrhea was abdominal pain mainly in mixed parasitosis. Parasitic diarrhea was more common in males than females (1.28: 1). Chronic parasitic diarrhea was most prevalent among low social class (49 or 57.6%) followed by very low social class (20 or 23.5%), middle social class (10 or 11.7%) and finally high social class (6 or 7.1%) with significant increase in low social class as compared to high one, and most prevalent among positive cases in rural area than in urban area.

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