Journal article

Determining the prevalence of Oesophagostomum bifurcum and Necator americanus infections using specific PCR amplification of DNA from faecal samples

JJ Verweij, DSS Pit, L Van Lieshout, SM Baeta, GD Dery, RB Gasser, AM Polderman

Tropical Medicine and International Health | BLACKWELL SCIENCE LTD | Published : 2001

Abstract

Until recently infection of humans with Oesophagostomum bifurcum was regarded as a rare zoonosis. But in northern Togo and Ghana its prevalence is 50% or more in certain villages. Diagnosis is hampered by the fact that the eggs of O. bifurcum are morphologically identical to those of the hookworm Necator americanus. Stools have to be cultured for 7 days to allow eggs to hatch to the characteristic third-stage (L3) larvae. We evaluated the applicability of specific polymerase chain reactions (PCRs) to amplify DNA from faecal samples as an alternative method for the differential diagnosis of the two infections. Oesophagostomum bifurcum-PCR was positive in 57 of 61 faecal samples known to conta..

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University of Melbourne Researchers