Risk factors for human fascioliasis in schoolchildren in Baños del Inca, Cajamarca, Peru

The aim of the investigation was to determine the risk factors for human fascioliasis in schoolchildren in five localities of the Baños del Inca district in Cajamarca, Peru. Secondarily, the prevalence of infection among this population was also studied. A questionnaire was applied to 270 schoolchil...

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Published in:Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene Vol. 112; no. 5; pp. 216 - 222
Main Authors: Rodríguez-Ulloa, Claudia, Rivera-Jacinto, Marco, Del Valle-Mendoza, Juana, Cerna, Corpus, Hoban, Cristian, Chilón, Silvia, Ortiz, Pedro
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: England 01-05-2018
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Summary:The aim of the investigation was to determine the risk factors for human fascioliasis in schoolchildren in five localities of the Baños del Inca district in Cajamarca, Peru. Secondarily, the prevalence of infection among this population was also studied. A questionnaire was applied to 270 schoolchildren from 6-12 years of age and to their parents with the aim of collecting information related to risk factors predisposing the children to Fasciola hepatica infection. Faecal samples from all the children were tested for F. hepatica using the modified rapid sedimentation method of Lumbreras and the technique of Kato-Katz for egg counts. Risk factors were identified as follows-raising cattle, consumption of radishes and chewing grass. The prevalence of F. hepatica in Baños del Inca was 6.30%; there was no significant difference by sex or age. Risk factors associated with this parasitosis in children in this area of Cajamarca were the raising of cattle, the consumption of radish and the habit of chewing grass. The prevalence results in this district suggest a mesoendemic level of infection, with local variations between meso- and hyper-endemic levels.
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ISSN:0035-9203
1878-3503
DOI:10.1093/trstmh/try049