Journal article
Parasitic infections and immune function: Effect of helminth infections in a malaria endemic area
AGC Boef, L May, D van Bodegom, L van Lieshout, JJ Verweij, AB Maier, RGJ Westendorp, UK Eriksson
Immunobiology | ELSEVIER GMBH, URBAN & FISCHER VERLAG | Published : 2013
Abstract
According to the hygiene hypothesis, reduced exposure to infections could explain the rise of atopic diseases in high-income countries. Helminths are hypothesised to alter the host's immune response in order to avoid elimination and, as a consequence, also reduce the host responsiveness to potential allergens. To elucidate the effect of current helminth infections on immune responsiveness in humans, we measured cytokine production in a rural Ghanaian population in an area with multiple endemic parasites including malaria, intestinal helminths and protozoa. Multiplex real-time PCR in stool samples was used for the detection of four gastrointestinal helminths, of which only Necator americanus ..
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Awarded by Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek
Funding Acknowledgements
This research was supported by the Netherlands Foundation for the advancements of Tropical Research (WOTRO 93-467), the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (Grants NWO 051-14-050 and 050-60810), the EU funded Network of Excellence LifeSpan (EU FP6 036894), the Prof. Dr. P.C. Flu-foundation, an unrestricted grant of the Board of the Leiden University Medical Center and the Association Dioraphte. None of these organisations had any role in the design, analysis, interpretation, or report of the study.