Paediatrica Indonesiana (Oct 2022)

Trichuris dysentery syndrome, the neglected tropical disease: a case series

  • Yulia Fatma Wardani,
  • Ida Safitri Laksono,
  • Teti Adriana Lubis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.14238/pi62.6.2022.430-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 62, no. 6
pp. 430 – 4

Abstract

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Almost 2 billion people, about a quarter of the world’s population, are infected with soil-transmitted helminths (STH) worldwide. Approximately 270 million preschool children and more than 550 million school-age children live in areas of extensive parasite transmission.1,2 Indonesia is a moderate-to-high-risk area of STH, with an overall mean prevalence of 28.12%. However, the prevalence in Papua is higher.3 A study reported that 50% of school-aged children in Jayapura, Papua, a high-risk area, suffered from STH, with distributions of 48.5% Ascaris lumbricoides, 28.6% Trichuris trichiura, 14.3% hookworm, and 8.6% mixed infection.4

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