Epidemiology of Hookworm Infection in Kintampo North Municipality, Ghana: Patterns of Malaria Coinfection, Anemia, and Albendazole Treatment Failure
Humphries D, Mosites E, Otchere J, Twum WA, Woo L, Jones-Sanpei H, Harrison LM, Bungiro RD, Benham-Pyle B, Bimi L, Edoh D, Bosompem K, Wilson M, Cappello M. Epidemiology of Hookworm Infection in Kintampo North Municipality, Ghana: Patterns of Malaria Coinfection, Anemia, and Albendazole Treatment Failure. American Journal Of Tropical Medicine And Hygiene 2011, 84: 792-800. PMID: 21540391, PMCID: PMC3083749, DOI: 10.4269/ajtmh.2011.11-0003.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsPoor nutritional statusHookworm infectionRisk factorsNutritional statusOverall egg reduction rateSerum immunoglobulin G (IgG) reactivitiesCross-sectional pilot studyEgg reduction rateImmunoglobulin G reactivityKintampo North MunicipalityAlbendazole therapyKintampo NorthMalaria coinfectionTreatment failureOverall prevalenceHigh prevalenceRepeat examinationEgg excretionSecretory antigensInfectionPilot studyCoinfectionSignificant reductionTherapyHigh rateTwenty-First Century Progress Toward the Global Control of Human Hookworm Infection
Bungiro R, Cappello M. Twenty-First Century Progress Toward the Global Control of Human Hookworm Infection. Current Infectious Disease Reports 2011, 13: 210. PMID: 21462001, DOI: 10.1007/s11908-011-0182-z.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchHuman hookworm infectionHost immune responseCandidate vaccine antigensHigher infection rateExcretory/secretory proteinsImmunoepidemiological studiesTreatment failureHookworm infectionMass chemotherapyImmune responseAnimal modelsParasitic infectionsVaccine antigensMolecular pathogenesisInfection rateHookworm diseaseReduced efficacyProtease inhibitorsHookwormInfectionSaharan AfricaRecent studiesContinued useSecretory proteinsAsthma