Intestinal helminths and malnutrition are independently associated with protection from cerebral malaria in Thailand

Mathieu Nacher, P. Singhasivanon, S. Treeprasertsuk, S. Vannaphan, B. Traoré, S. Looareesuwan, F. Gay
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引用次数: 48

Abstract

Abstract Although human infection with Ascaris appears to be associated with protection from cerebral malaria, there are many potential socio-economic and nutritional confounders related to helminth infection that need to be considered. In a hospital-based study, 37 cases of cerebral malaria and 61 cases of non-severe malaria with high parasite biomass (i.e. hyperparasitaemia and/or circulating schizonts) answered a structured questionnaire and were screened for intestinal helminths. Logistic regression was then used to adjust for the potential confounders. The adjusted odds ratios (OR) and their 95% confidence intervals (CI) still showed a significant protective association for helminths (OR=0.24; CI=0.07-0.78; P=0.02) and malnutrition (OR=0.11; CI=0.02-0.58; P=0.01), with no evidence of interaction between the two. There was also a significant dose-effect trend for the helminth infections (P=0.048). These results, despite coming from a hospital-based study, indicate that the apparent association between helminths and protection from cerebral malaria is not the result of socio-economic or nutritional confounders.
在泰国,肠道蠕虫和营养不良与预防脑型疟疾独立相关
虽然人感染蛔虫似乎与预防脑型疟疾有关,但仍有许多与蛔虫感染有关的潜在社会经济和营养混杂因素需要考虑。在一项以医院为基础的研究中,37例脑型疟疾和61例具有高寄生虫生物量(即高寄生虫血症和/或循环分裂症)的非严重疟疾患者回答了一份结构化问卷,并对肠道寄生虫进行了筛查。然后使用逻辑回归来调整潜在的混杂因素。校正后的优势比(OR)及其95%置信区间(CI)仍显示出对蠕虫的显著保护性关联(OR=0.24;CI = 0.07 - -0.78;P=0.02)和营养不良(OR=0.11;CI = 0.02 - -0.58;P=0.01),两者之间没有相互作用的证据。寄生虫感染也有显著的剂量效应趋势(P=0.048)。尽管这些结果来自一项以医院为基础的研究,但它们表明,蠕虫和预防脑型疟疾之间的明显联系并不是社会经济或营养混杂因素的结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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