DISTRIBUTION OF HYDATIDOSIS AND CYSTICERCOSIS IN DIFFERENT PERUVIAN POPULATIONS AS DEMONSTRATED BY AN ENZYME-LINKED IMMUNOELECTROTRANSFER BLOT (EITB) ASSAY
Pl. Moro et al., DISTRIBUTION OF HYDATIDOSIS AND CYSTICERCOSIS IN DIFFERENT PERUVIAN POPULATIONS AS DEMONSTRATED BY AN ENZYME-LINKED IMMUNOELECTROTRANSFER BLOT (EITB) ASSAY, The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene, 51(6), 1994, pp. 851-855
Citations number
16
Categorie Soggetti
Public, Environmental & Occupation Heath","Tropical Medicine
A serosurvey for human hydatidosis and cysticercosis was performed in
different regions of Peru. Those regions included a known endemic area
for cystic hydatid disease, a cooperative in the central Peruvian And
es near the city of Tarma, Department of Junin; three areas endemic fo
r cysticercosis in the Departments of Ancash, Cuzco, and San Martin, w
here the status of hydatid disease is not well defined; and an urban s
hantytown near Lima, where neither zoonosis is known to be present. A
seroprevalence for hydatidosis 1.9% (6 of 309) was found with both the
enzyme-linked immunoelectrotransfer blot (EITB) and double diffusion
assays in the area endemic for hydatidosis. Seroprevalence in the othe
r zones tested was zero using only the EITB assay. Cysticercosis serop
revalence was high in pig-raising zones but low in the high-altitude,
sheep-raising areas and in the seaport of Callao. No cross-reactions b
etween Echinococcus granulosus and cysticercosis were noted in any of
the regions studied. Hydatid infection remains a major health problem
in the central Peruvian Andes where sheep raising is widely practiced;
however, in those regions where mainly swine are raised, human hydati
d infection is not a problem.