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Multiple etiologies of infectious diarrhea and concurrent infections in a pediatric outpatient-based screening study in Odisha, India. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates various causes of acute diarrhea in children under five, highlighting that multiple pathogens are often present but underdiagnosed.
  • Fecal samples from 130 children were analyzed, revealing that the most common culprits were bacteria, followed closely by rotavirus and adenovirus, with significant cases of co-infections.
  • The findings emphasize the importance of accurately identifying multiple infectious agents to improve treatment strategies for severe diarrhea among young children.

Article Abstract

Background: There are multiple etiologies responsible for infectious gastroenteritis causing acute diarrhea which are often under diagnosed. Also acute diarrhea is one of the major causes of morbidity and mortality among children less than 5 years of age.

Methods: In our study, fecal samples ( = ) were collected from children (<5 years) presenting with symptoms of acute diarrhea. Samples were screened for viral, bacterial, and parasitic etiologies. Rotavirus and Adenovirus were screened by immunochromatographic tests. Diarrheagenic (EPEC, EHEC, STEC, EAEC, O157, O111), spp., spp., , spp., and spp. were detected by gene-specific polymerase chain reaction.

Results: was detected to be the major etiological agent (30.07%) followed by Rotavirus (26.15%), (23.84%), Adenovirus (4.61%), (3.07%), and (0.77%). Concurrent infections with two or more pathogens were observed in 44 of 130 (33.84%) cases with a predominant incidence particularly in <2-year-old children (65.90%) compared to children of 2-5 years age group (34.09%). An overall result showed significantly higher detection rates among children with diarrhea in both combinations of two as well as three infections concurrently ( = 0.004915 and 0.03917, respectively).

Conclusion: Suspecting possible multiple infectious etiologies and diagnosis of the right causative agent(s) can aid in a better pharmacological management of acute childhood diarrhea. It is hypothesized that in cases with concurrent infections the etiological agents might be complementing each other's strategies of pathogenesis resulting in severe diarrhea that could be studied better in experimental infections.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5387278PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13099-017-0166-0DOI Listing

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