Studies of Diarrheal Disease in Central America

III. Specific Etiology of Endemic Diarrhea and Dysentery in Guatemalan Children

Virginia Pierce Institute of Nutrition of Central America and Panama (INCAP), Guatemala, C. A.

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Werner Ascoli Institute of Nutrition of Central America and Panama (INCAP), Guatemala, C. A.

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Romeo de Leon Institute of Nutrition of Central America and Panama (INCAP), Guatemala, C. A.

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John E. Gordon Institute of Nutrition of Central America and Panama (INCAP), Guatemala, C. A.

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Summary

Bacteriological examination of 201 Guatemalan children with acute endemic diarrheal disease showed an association with Shigella in 13% of cases. The carrier rate for that infectious agent in 225 control children of the same ages, 1 through 5 years, was 6%. Examination was by single rectal swabs.

Neither Salmonella nor enteropathogenic E. coli was frequent in the age group examined. Except for hookworms in patients from rural areas, helminths and protozoa were present in equal proportions in persons with and without diarrhea. Guatemalan children showed a high rate of intestinal parasitism, since by 3 years of age practically every village child was infected with at least one species.

The critical question still unanswered is what proportion of acute diarrheas in childhood is of infectious origin. The problem has two parts, the specific infections of the intestinal tract and the many other infectious diseases which on occasion lead to diarrhea. The place of the viruses as inciting agents in both groups needs attention.

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