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Criptosporidiosis in children from some highland costa rican rural and urban areas

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Authors

Mata Jiménez, Leonardo
Bolaños Acuña, Hilda
Pizarro Torres, Daniel
Vives Blanco, Marcela

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

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The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 32(1):24-29

Abstract

This report summarizes both a prospective study of diarrhea in cohorts of rural children in their natural ecosystem, and a vertical study of diarrheic urban children attending a hospital emergency service. Cryptosporidium oocysts were found in feces of 4.3% of the cases, while all controls were negative. No infection occurred in the first year of life among rural infants, contrasting with a 3% infection rate in children under 1 year of age in the metropolitan area. This could be attributed to intense and exclusive breastfeeding for several months in the rural area while in the urban area many infants are not breast-fed at all, or are weaned prematurely. No infection was found in wholly breast-fed infants. Diarrhea associated with Cryptosporidium was watery and without inflammatory cells. Dehydration was common in urban children, but was rapidly corrected by oral rehydration therapy, or by intravenous fluid therapy in some cases. Infections clustered in the warmer, rainy and humid months of the year.

Description

artículo -- Universidad de Costa Rica. Instituto de investigaciones en salud, 1984

Keywords

Diarrea, Rehidratación Oral, Comunidad, Nutrición del niño, Deshidratación, Salud pública

Citation

http://www.ajtmh.org/content/33/1/24.full.pdf+html

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