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1.
Artigo | IMSEAR | ID: sea-228667

RESUMO

Background: The morbidity and mortality attributed to pneumococcus are impressive even in the absence of any problem of antibiotic resistance. The objectives of this study were to determine the prevalence of asymptomatic pneumococcal carriage in children aged between 2 months and 2 years in Libreville and to identify the socio-demographic factors associated with carriage.Methods: Cross-sectional, descriptive, and analytical study from September 2019 to February 2020, including infants aged 2 months to 2 years, randomly selected, in 8 health centres in Libreville. We collected sociodemographic data from children and parents. Nasopharyngeal swabs were taken from each child and analyzed in the laboratory of institut de recherche en ecologie tropicale (IRET). Categorical data were expressed as frequencies. Univariate analyses (odd ratio-OR) were performed to measure the relationship between the relevant variables and pneumococcal carriage, followed by a multivariate analysis using logistic regression. The threshold of statistical significance was set at p<0.05 for a two-tailed chi-square test.Results: Of the 434 children included, 51.2% (n=222) were girls, with a mean age of 5.4�2 months. Streptococcus pneumoniae was found in 53 children, giving a prevalence of 12.6% (95% CI [9.5-15.6%]). The prevalence was the same for both sexes. Carriage was associated with more than 2 siblings (OR=2.1; p=0.01); an age greater than 6 months (OR=3.6; p=0.001); a child's rank higher than the median (OR=2.3; p=0.006); a mother's low level of education (OR=4.5; p=0.001); a father working in the informal sector (OR=2.4; p=0.01). The mother's level of education was the factor found in the multivariate analysis (p=0.043).Conclusions: The data from this survey encourage the serotyping of strains to guide the vaccination strategy.

2.
j. public health epidemiol. (jphe) ; 15(2): 39-49, 2023. figures, tables
Artigo em Inglês | AIM | ID: biblio-1427877

RESUMO

Toxoplasma gondii is an obligatory intracellular parasite that causes a zoonotic disease capable of infecting nearly all warm-blooded hosts, including humans. However, reports on the molecular prevalence of T. gondii in humans are rare in Gabon. The present study aimed to evaluate the serological and molecular prevalence of T. gondii among apparently healthy rural populations in four regions of Gabon. This study included six hundred blood samples from the Interdisciplinary Center for Medical Research (CIRMF) bank, including 300 women and 300 men living in 111 villages. Blood samples were screened using enzyme-linked fluorescent assay (ELFA), while buffy coat samples were analyzed using PCR analyses. Of the 600 samples screened, 548 (91.3%) showed IgG antibodies against T. gondii; 11 (2%) had both IgG and IgM. Among the 548 positive samples, 155 (28%) had higher IgG titers (>300 UI/ml), and 49 of them (31.6%) were detected with T. gondii DNA. The present findings on human toxoplasmosis in Gabon suggest that at an older age, reactivation of old infections seems more frequent than new infections, as indicated by the presence of T. gondii using PCR among elevated IgG subjects without IgM. Further studies should be performed to identify the genotypes of T. gondii that infect humans in Gabon.


Assuntos
Humanos , Toxoplasma , Toxoplasmose Congênita , População Rural , Humanos , Prevalência
3.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 108(7): 845-849, 1jan. 2013. graf
Artigo em Inglês | LILACS | ID: lil-696018

RESUMO

During a research project aimed at the study of the Culicinae fauna of Gabon and carried out in the National Park of La Lopé, we captured an unknown sandfly male specimen (genus Phlebotomus) by CDC miniature light trap belonging to a new species for Science. Furthermore, the originality of his genitalia does not allow us to include this species in one of the existing subgenus, thus in this paper we propose the creation of a new subgenus, as Phlebotomus (Legeromyia) multihamatus sp. nov., subg. nov. described from the National Park of La Lopé, through one male captured with CDC miniature light trap. A new species and a new subgenus of sandfly is characterised by a short style with three spines, a paramere wearing a basal hook as well as a basal pouch and the absence of basal lobe on the coxite. The originality of the genitalia of the male gives way to discussion about potential primary homologies between P. multihamatus sp. nov. and Phlebotomus (Abonnencius) fortunatarum, Phlebotomus (Anaphlebotomus) stantoni and Phlebotomus (Euphlebotomus) argentipes, which should be verified for future studies. The discovery of this new species in Gabon must encourage the study of sandflies in this country.


Assuntos
Animais , Masculino , Phlebotomus/anatomia & histologia , Phlebotomus/classificação , Gabão , Especificidade da Espécie
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