High rates of undiagnosed leprosy and subclinical infection amongst school children in the Amazon Region
AUTOR(ES)
Barreto, Josafá Gonçalves, Guimarães, Layana de Souza, Frade, Marco Andrey Cipriani, Rosa, Patricia Sammarco, Salgado, Claudio Guedes
FONTE
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz
DATA DE PUBLICAÇÃO
2012-12
RESUMO
Leprosy in children is correlated with community-level factors, including the recent presence of disease and active foci of transmission in the community. We performed clinical and serological examinations of 1,592 randomly selected school children (SC) in a cross-sectional study of eight hyperendemic municipalities in the Brazilian Amazon Region. Sixty-three (4%) SC, with a mean age of 13.3 years (standard deviation = 2.6), were diagnosed with leprosy and 777 (48.8%) were seropositive for anti-phenolic glycolipid-I (PGL-I). Additionally, we evaluated 256 house-hold contacts (HHCs) of the students diagnosed with leprosy; 24 (9.4%) HHC were also diagnosed with leprosy and 107 (41.8%) were seropositive. The seroprevalence of anti-PGL-I was significantly higher amongst girls, students from urban areas and students from public schools (p < 0.0001). Forty-five (71.4%) new cases detected amongst SC were classified as paucibacillary and 59 (93.6%) patients did not demonstrate any degree of physical disability at diagnosis. The results of this study suggest that there is a high rate of undiagnosed leprosy and subclinical infection amongst children in the Amazon Region. The advantages of school surveys in hyperendemic areas include identifying leprosy patients at an early stage when they show no physical disabilities, preventing the spread of the infection in the community and breaking the chain of transmission.
Documentos Relacionados
- Social school contacts of multibacillary leprosy cases in children living in the hyperendemic region of the Midwest of Brazil
- High prevalence of norovirus in children with sporadic acute gastroenteritis in Manaus, Amazon Region, northern Brazil
- Slow clearance of Plasmodium vivax with chloroquine amongst children younger than six months of age in the Brazilian Amazon
- Association between anemia and subclinical infection in children in Paraíba State, Brazil
- Temporal trend of leprosy in a region of high endemicity in the Brazilian Northeast