Parasites and Vectors
Volume 3, Issue 1, 2010

Changing trends in intestinal parasitic infections among long-term-residents and settled immigrants in Qatar (Article) (Open Access)

Abu-Madi M.A. , Behnke J.M. , Doiphode S.H.
  • a Department of Health Sciences, College of Arts and Sciences, Qatar University, P.O. Box 2713, Doha, Qatar
  • b School of Biology, University of Nottingham, University Park, Nottingham, NG7 2RD, United Kingdom
  • c Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, Hamad Medical Corporation, Qatar, P.O. Box 3050, Doha, Qatar

Abstract

Background. The rapid socio-economic development in Qatar in the last two decades has encouraged a mass influx of immigrant workers, the majority of whom originate from countries with low socio-economic levels, inadequate medical care and many are known to carry patent intestinal helminth and protozoan infections on arrival in Qatar. Some eventually acquire residency status but little is known about whether they continue to harbour infections. Methods. We examined 9208 hospital records of stool samples that had been analysed for the presence of intestinal helminth and protozoan ova/cysts, over the period 2005-2008, of subjects from 28 nationalities, but resident in Qatar and therefore not recent arrivals in the country. Results. Overall 10.2% of subjects were infected with at least one species, 2.6% with helminths and 8.0% with protozoan species. Although hookworms, Ascaris lumbricoides, Trichuris trichiura and Hymenolepis nana were observed, the majority of helminth infections (69%) were caused by hookworms, and these were largely aggregated among 20.0-39.9 year-old male subjects from Nepal. The remaining cases of helminth infection were mostly among Asian immigrants. Protozoan infections were more uniformly spread across immigrants from different regions when prevalence was calculated on combined data, but this disguised three quite contrasting underlying patterns for 3 taxa of intestinal protozoa. Blastocystis hominis, Giardia duodenalis and non-pathogenic amoebae were all acquired in childhood, but whereas prevalence of B. hominis rose to a plateau and then even further among the elderly, prevalence of G. duodenalis fell markedly in children aged 10 and older, and stayed low (< 2%) gradually falling even further in the elderly. In contrast the prevalence of non-pathogenic amoebae (Entamoeba coli, E. hartmanni, Endolimax nana and Iodamoeba buetschlii) peaked in the 30.0-39.9 age group and only then dropped to very low values among the oldest subjects examined. A worrying trend in respect of both helminth and protozoan parasites was the increase in prevalence over the period 2005-2008, in helminth infections prevalence increasing 2-3 fold by 2008, and in protozoan infections by 1.5-2.0 fold. Conclusions. We suggest that helminth infections are probably acquired abroad when immigrants visit their home villages, whilst protozoan infections are reinforced by transmission in Qatar, possibly in the poorer areas of the state where immigrant workers live. We discuss the significance of these findings and emphasize that they have clear implications for the health authorities. © 2010 Abu-Madi et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

Author Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Index Keywords

medical record review Giardia intestinalis immigrant Trichuris trichiura parasitosis Blastocystis hominis parasite identification human infection rate trend study Qatar sex difference feces analysis giardiasis Aged geographic distribution Ascaris lumbricoides school child Ascariasis Adolescent male preschool child female Infant protozoal infection Endolimax nana hookworm infection Entamoeba coli Giardia duodenalis Ancylostomatoidea amoeba (life cycle stage) Hymenolepis nana prevalence hymenolepiasis Protozoa Article Iodamoeba buetschlii Vermes blastocystosis major clinical study adult Trichuris trichuriasis intestine infection helminthiasis age distribution Child

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-77957789301&doi=10.1186%2f1756-3305-3-98&partnerID=40&md5=bdac6f6890d544b85163e097db9d1cf0

DOI: 10.1186/1756-3305-3-98
ISSN: 17563305
Cited by: 24
Original Language: English