Title
Campylobacter transmission in a Peruvian Shantytown: A longitudinal study using strain typing of Campylobacter isolates from chickens and humans in household clusters
Date Issued
15 January 2003
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Oberhelman R.
Cordova J.
Taylor D.
Meza R.
Perez J.
LeBron C.
Rodgers F.
Woodward D.
Price L.
Publisher(s)
Oxford University Press
Abstract
Campylobacter jejuni is a major cause of pediatric diarrhea in developing countries - free-ranging chickens are presumed to be a common source. Campylobacter strains from monthly surveillance and diarrhea cases were compared by means of restriction-fragment length polymorphism (RFLP), rapid amplified polymorphic DNA, and Lior serotyping. RFLP analysis of 156 human and 682 avian strains demonstrated identical strains in chickens and humans in 29 (70.7%) of 41 families, and 35%-39% of human isolates from diarrhea and nondiarrhea cases were identical to a household chicken isolate. Isolation of the same RFLP type from a household chicken and a human within 1 month was highly protective against diarrhea (odds ratio, 0.07; P<.005). Campylobacter strains from symptomatic humans were unlikely to be identical to strains recently carried by household chickens, limiting the potential benefits from household-based control measures.
Start page
260
End page
269
Volume
187
Issue
2
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Enfermedades infecciosas
DOI
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-0037439277
PubMed ID
Source
Journal of Infectious Diseases
ISSN of the container
00221899
Sponsor(s)
Financial support: Thrasher Research Fund (award 02813-1); ITREID grant from the National Institutes of Health; Navy Medical Research Center (work unit 63002A.810.O.B0020).
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus