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Socio-demographic, Clinical and Laboratory
Predictors for the Diagnosis of Visceral Larva
Migrans in Children - Upper Egypt

مؤلف البحث

Lamia A. Galal
, Abeer E. Mahmoud
, Rasha A. H. Attia
, Azza Eltayeb
and Dalia G. Mahran

مجلة البحث
International Journal of TROPICAL DISEASE
& Health
المشارك في البحث
الناشر
NULL
تصنيف البحث
1
عدد البحث
19(2)
موقع البحث
NULL
سنة البحث
2016
صفحات البحث
1-13
ملخص البحث

Visceral larva migrans (VLM) is a worldwide neglected disease, prevalent among children from
socio-economically disadvantaged populations in temperate and tropical regions. Infections may go
undiagnosed as the required diagnostic tests; serological, molecular and/or imaging examinations
are expensive, which may not be affordable or available. We aimed to establish predictors useful in
the diagnosis of VLM in children in Upper Egypt. A one year cross-sectional study was
conducted at Assiut University Children's Hospital and eighty-one children aged between 6
months to
13 years old (mean± SD 5.7 ± 3.2 years) were eligible to our inclusion criteria, 55.6% of
them were males. Socio-demographic risk factors, clinical, laboratory and imaging tests were
collected. ELISA (anti-T. canis IgG) results were positive in 60.5%. By using the bivariate analysis,
a significant association was found between seropositive ELISA and younger age less than four
years (p-value <0.0001), having underground water at their homes (p= 0.004), previous history of
parasitic infection (p= 0.003) and positive liver ultrasonographic findings (p=0.001). In a multivariate logistic regression model with positive and negative ELISA results as a dependent factor, younger age (<4 years), history of parasitic infestation and positive liver ultrasonographic findings
were
found to be significant predictors, while no significant association with other factors was identified.
Thus, clinicians should consider the positive liver ultrasonographic changes with the earlier history
of parasitic infection in children under four years as predictors for VLM infection, according to which they should undergo ELISA or other tests to confirm their diagnosis.