[巴西东部亚马逊地区Parakanã土著部落乙型、丙型和丁型肝炎病毒的流行病学]。

M C Soares, R C Menezes, S J Martins, G Bensabath
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本研究旨在确定乙型、丙型和丁型肝炎病毒(HBV、HCV和HDV)感染的流行情况,并描述其在巴西帕尔州Parakanã土著部落中的传播情况。这个部落第一次与更广泛的巴西社会接触是在20世纪70年代和80年代。截至1992年10月,该部落共有350人,其中222人住在帕拉纳廷加村,128人住在马罗塞瓦拉村。用酶免疫测定法对96.9%的人群的血清样本进行上述病毒感染标记物检测。20世纪70年代从Parakanã收集的另外106份血清样本也进行了测试。利用现代样本获得的结果显示,pararatinga居民中HBV感染的总体患病率为84.7%,其中14.4%为携带者。在马罗塞瓦拉,总体感染率仅为17.7%,在研究人群中未发现携带者。HBV携带者HDV感染标志物均为阴性。免疫印迹证实,帕拉纳廷加和马罗塞瓦拉的HCV感染率分别为1.4%和1.6%。该研究的显著发现包括HBV的水平传播发生在Paranatinga的早期;属于同一部落的两个邻近村庄之间乙型肝炎病毒感染流行率差异很大;两个村庄都检测到丙型肝炎病毒感染;并且,从历史血清来看,在Parakanã人群与外界接触的最初几年中,HBV感染的流行率很低,HCV感染没有。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
[Epidemiology of hepatitis B, C and D viruses among indigenous Parakanã tribe in the Eastern Brazilian Amazon Region].

This study sought to establish the prevalence of infection with the hepatitis B, C, and D viruses (HBV, HCV, and HDV) and to describe their transmission among the Parakanã, an indigenous tribe in Pará State, Brazil. This tribe's first contacts with broader Brazilian society occurred in the 1970s and 1980s. As of October 1992, the tribe consisted of 350 individuals, of whom 222 lived in the village of Paranatinga and 128 in the village of Maroxewara. Serum samples from 96.9% of this population were tested for markers of infection with the above-named viruses by means of enzyme immunoassays. Another 106 serum samples collected from Parakanã in the 1970s were also tested. The results obtained with the modern samples showed an overall prevalence of HBV infection of 84.7% among the residents of Paranatinga, 14.4% of whom were carriers. In Maroxewara, the overall prevalence of infection was only 17.7% and no carriers were detected in the study population. HBV carriers were negative for markers of HDV infection. The prevalence of HCV infection, confirmed by immunoblot, was 1.4% and 1.6% in Paranatinga and Maroxewara, respectively. Among the notable findings of this study were that horizontal transmission of HBV takes place at an early age in Paranatinga; that HBV infection prevalences differ greatly between two nearby villages belonging to the same tribe; that HCV infection was detected in both villages; and, from the historic sera, that the prevalence of HBV infection was low and HCV infection was absent during the first years in which the Parakanã people had outside contact.

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