The prevalence of Trichuris, Ascaris and hookworm infection in Orang Asli children.

Southeast Asian J Trop Med Public Health

Department of Parasitology and Medical Entomology, Faculty of Medicine, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

Published: March 1997

AI Article Synopsis

  • A community study examined the prevalence and intensity of infections caused by Ascaris, Trichuris, and hookworm in 205 Orang Asli children aged 1-13 years.
  • The overall infection rates were found to be high, with Trichuris at 91.7%, Ascaris at 62.9%, and hookworm at 28.8%, with many children experiencing moderate to severe infections.
  • The study noted age-dependent trends, showing that Ascaris infections peaked at age 5 and above, while Trichuris was consistently high across all ages, and hookworm infections peaked at ages 5-6 before declining.
  • Strong correlations were identified between different types of worm infections, particularly a significant positive relationship

Article Abstract

A community study on the age and sex related prevalence, intensity infection and frequency distribution of Ascaris, Trichuris and hookworm was carried out in 205 Orang Asli (Aborigines) children (95 boys, 110 girls) aged 1-13 years. The overall prevalence of Ascaris, Trichuris and hookworm was 62.9%, 91.7% and 28.8%, respectively. Almost two-thirds of the children were infected with moderate and severe intensity infection of Trichuris, 46.3% had moderate to severe intensity infection of Ascaris. However only 1.5% had moderate intensity of hookworm infection. The prevalence and mean intensity infection (measured by eggs per g) of Ascaris was age-dependent; lower in age group 1-4 years reached peak and stable at age group 5 years and above. The prevalence of Trichuris was high in all age groups and it fluctuated with age; the mean intensity of infection of Trichuris (measured by eggs per g) was age-dependent. Hookworm infection also rose with age and reached peak at 5-6 years, following that the prevalence declined. The frequency distributions of Ascaris, and hookworm were overdispersed. A strong positive correlation (p < 0.001) were observed between Ascaris and Trichuris and between hookworm and Trichuris. A positive correlation (p < 0.01) were also observed between Ascaris and hookworm.

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