Seyi S. Enitan, Morenikeji Hannah Adeniyi, S. Junaid, Ernest Chibuike Ohanu, N. Ogbonna, Effiong Effiong Joseph, G. Itodo, O. Adekunbi, Joan Odigie, Ayomide Ruth Olabanji
{"title":"尼日利亚西南部某私立大学表面健康大学生结核分枝杆菌IgM、IgG抗体检测及相关危险因素分析","authors":"Seyi S. Enitan, Morenikeji Hannah Adeniyi, S. Junaid, Ernest Chibuike Ohanu, N. Ogbonna, Effiong Effiong Joseph, G. Itodo, O. Adekunbi, Joan Odigie, Ayomide Ruth Olabanji","doi":"10.30560/mhs.v4n2p6","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Background: Infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (TB) is frequent among Nigerians. Many people are infected without realizing it (asymptomatic) and thus provide a risk of transmission to others. Not only will early treatment prevent TB complications, but it will also help to break the infection cycle in a community. \nObjective: The study was conducted to determine the prevalence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis IgM and IgG antibodies and associated risk factors among apparently healthy undergraduate Students of Babcock University, Ilishan-Remo, Ogun State. \nMethodology: The serum samples of 100 consenting participants were collected randomly and screened for TB antibodies using Aria TB IgG/IgM Combo Rapid Antibody Test Cassette (CTK Biotech Inc. Poway, CA 92064, USA). A structured questionnaire was administered to consenting students to obtain information on their bio-data (e.g, the age, sex, study level etc.), as well as clinical information regarding their health (History of TB, history of BCG vaccination, use of anti-TB medications, alcohol consumption, smoking habits etc.). \nResults: The outcome of this study shows that 15 (15%) out of the 100 participants screened, were positive for TB IgG antibody, while, only 1 (1%) person was positive for TB IgM antibody. There was no significant association (P>0.05) between percentage TB IgG positivity and the socio-demographic characteristics of the study participants (gender, age, study level and tribe), except for religion. The percentage of TB IgG positivity among the study participants was found to be significantly higher than of TB IgM positivity (P<0.05). None of the 15 participants who tested positive to TB IgG indicated any of the signs and symptoms (persistent cough, chest pain, nausea, fever, chills, loss of appetite, fatigue and night sweat) associated with TB), however the only person who tested positive for TB IgM indicated all, except night sweat. Identified risk factors associated with the occurrence of TB IgM include history of TB, lack of BCG vaccination, history of diabetes and physical unfitness. \nConclusion: The findings of this study show that asymptomatic and latent tuberculosis infection exists among the study participants, and that if left untreated, it will progress to active tuberculosis with all of its associated complications, including death. This emphasizes the importance of ongoing public health education, BCG vaccination, and periodic screening to detect asymptomatic cases in the study population in order to break the infection cycle.","PeriodicalId":421866,"journal":{"name":"Modern Health Science","volume":"50 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-02-12","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Detection of Mycobacterium Tuberculosis IgM and IgG Antibodies and Associated Risk Factors Among Apparently Healthy Undergraduate Students of a Private University in South-West Nigeria\",\"authors\":\"Seyi S. Enitan, Morenikeji Hannah Adeniyi, S. Junaid, Ernest Chibuike Ohanu, N. Ogbonna, Effiong Effiong Joseph, G. Itodo, O. Adekunbi, Joan Odigie, Ayomide Ruth Olabanji\",\"doi\":\"10.30560/mhs.v4n2p6\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Background: Infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (TB) is frequent among Nigerians. Many people are infected without realizing it (asymptomatic) and thus provide a risk of transmission to others. Not only will early treatment prevent TB complications, but it will also help to break the infection cycle in a community. \\nObjective: The study was conducted to determine the prevalence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis IgM and IgG antibodies and associated risk factors among apparently healthy undergraduate Students of Babcock University, Ilishan-Remo, Ogun State. \\nMethodology: The serum samples of 100 consenting participants were collected randomly and screened for TB antibodies using Aria TB IgG/IgM Combo Rapid Antibody Test Cassette (CTK Biotech Inc. Poway, CA 92064, USA). A structured questionnaire was administered to consenting students to obtain information on their bio-data (e.g, the age, sex, study level etc.), as well as clinical information regarding their health (History of TB, history of BCG vaccination, use of anti-TB medications, alcohol consumption, smoking habits etc.). \\nResults: The outcome of this study shows that 15 (15%) out of the 100 participants screened, were positive for TB IgG antibody, while, only 1 (1%) person was positive for TB IgM antibody. There was no significant association (P>0.05) between percentage TB IgG positivity and the socio-demographic characteristics of the study participants (gender, age, study level and tribe), except for religion. The percentage of TB IgG positivity among the study participants was found to be significantly higher than of TB IgM positivity (P<0.05). None of the 15 participants who tested positive to TB IgG indicated any of the signs and symptoms (persistent cough, chest pain, nausea, fever, chills, loss of appetite, fatigue and night sweat) associated with TB), however the only person who tested positive for TB IgM indicated all, except night sweat. Identified risk factors associated with the occurrence of TB IgM include history of TB, lack of BCG vaccination, history of diabetes and physical unfitness. \\nConclusion: The findings of this study show that asymptomatic and latent tuberculosis infection exists among the study participants, and that if left untreated, it will progress to active tuberculosis with all of its associated complications, including death. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
背景:结核分枝杆菌(TB)感染在尼日利亚人中很常见。许多人在没有意识到(无症状)的情况下被感染,从而提供了传播给他人的风险。早期治疗不仅可以预防结核病并发症,而且还将有助于打破社区中的感染循环。目的:了解奥根州伊利山-雷莫市巴布科克大学表面健康的本科生中结核分枝杆菌IgM和IgG抗体的流行情况及相关危险因素。方法:随机收集100名同意参与者的血清样本,使用Aria TB IgG/IgM组合快速抗体测试盒(CTK Biotech Inc.)筛选TB抗体。Poway, CA 92064, USA)。向同意的学生发放了一份结构化问卷,以获取有关其生物数据(例如,年龄、性别、学习水平等)以及有关其健康的临床信息(结核病史、卡介苗接种史、抗结核病药物使用情况、饮酒情况、吸烟习惯等)的信息。结果:本研究结果显示,在筛选的100名参与者中,结核IgG抗体阳性15人(15%),结核IgM抗体阳性1人(1%)。除宗教外,TB IgG阳性百分比与研究参与者的社会人口学特征(性别、年龄、研究水平和部落)无显著相关性(P>0.05)。研究对象中结核IgG阳性比例显著高于结核IgM阳性比例(P<0.05)。15名结核IgG检测呈阳性的参与者中,没有人表现出与结核相关的任何体征和症状(持续咳嗽、胸痛、恶心、发烧、发冷、食欲不振、疲劳和盗汗),但唯一一名结核IgM检测呈阳性的人表现出除盗汗外的所有症状。已确定的与结核IgM发生相关的危险因素包括结核史、缺乏卡介苗接种、糖尿病史和身体不健康。结论:本研究结果表明,在研究参与者中存在无症状和潜伏性结核病感染,如果不及时治疗,它将发展为活动性结核病,并伴有所有相关并发症,包括死亡。这强调了持续的公共卫生教育、卡介苗接种和定期筛查的重要性,以发现研究人群中的无症状病例,以打破感染循环。
Detection of Mycobacterium Tuberculosis IgM and IgG Antibodies and Associated Risk Factors Among Apparently Healthy Undergraduate Students of a Private University in South-West Nigeria
Background: Infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (TB) is frequent among Nigerians. Many people are infected without realizing it (asymptomatic) and thus provide a risk of transmission to others. Not only will early treatment prevent TB complications, but it will also help to break the infection cycle in a community.
Objective: The study was conducted to determine the prevalence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis IgM and IgG antibodies and associated risk factors among apparently healthy undergraduate Students of Babcock University, Ilishan-Remo, Ogun State.
Methodology: The serum samples of 100 consenting participants were collected randomly and screened for TB antibodies using Aria TB IgG/IgM Combo Rapid Antibody Test Cassette (CTK Biotech Inc. Poway, CA 92064, USA). A structured questionnaire was administered to consenting students to obtain information on their bio-data (e.g, the age, sex, study level etc.), as well as clinical information regarding their health (History of TB, history of BCG vaccination, use of anti-TB medications, alcohol consumption, smoking habits etc.).
Results: The outcome of this study shows that 15 (15%) out of the 100 participants screened, were positive for TB IgG antibody, while, only 1 (1%) person was positive for TB IgM antibody. There was no significant association (P>0.05) between percentage TB IgG positivity and the socio-demographic characteristics of the study participants (gender, age, study level and tribe), except for religion. The percentage of TB IgG positivity among the study participants was found to be significantly higher than of TB IgM positivity (P<0.05). None of the 15 participants who tested positive to TB IgG indicated any of the signs and symptoms (persistent cough, chest pain, nausea, fever, chills, loss of appetite, fatigue and night sweat) associated with TB), however the only person who tested positive for TB IgM indicated all, except night sweat. Identified risk factors associated with the occurrence of TB IgM include history of TB, lack of BCG vaccination, history of diabetes and physical unfitness.
Conclusion: The findings of this study show that asymptomatic and latent tuberculosis infection exists among the study participants, and that if left untreated, it will progress to active tuberculosis with all of its associated complications, including death. This emphasizes the importance of ongoing public health education, BCG vaccination, and periodic screening to detect asymptomatic cases in the study population in order to break the infection cycle.