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- Title
Diagnosis and subtype analysis of Blastocystis sp. in 442 patients in a hospital setting in the Netherlands.
- Authors
Bart, Aldert; Wentink-Bonnema, Ellen M. S.; Gilis, Henk; Verhaar, Nienke; Wassenaar, Carla J. A.; van Vugt, Michèle; Goorhuis, Abraham; van Gool, Tom
- Abstract
<bold>Background: </bold>Blastocystis sp. are among the most commonly observed intestinal parasites in routine clinical parasitology. Blastocystis in humans consists of at least 9 genetic subtypes. Different subtypes of Blastocystis may be associated with differences in pathogenicity and symptomatology.<bold>Methods: </bold>Advanced microscopy on two samples and sequence-confirmed PCR on a third sample from the same individual were used for Blastocystis diagnosis and subtype analyses on routine clinical samples in a university hospital.<bold>Results: </bold>With a combined gold standard of sequence-confirmed PCR and positive advanced microscopy, 107 out of 442 (24.2%) patients were diagnosed with Blastocystis. infection, which is a high frequency of detection in comparison to previous reports from industrialized countries. The sensitivity of microscopy and sequence-confirmed PCR was 99.1% (106/107) and 96.3% (103/107), respectively.Among 103 typable samples, subtype 3 was most abundant (n = 43, 42%), followed by subtypes 1 and 2 (both n = 23, 22%), subtype 4 (n = 12, 12%), and single samples with subtypes 6 (1%) and subtype 7 (1%). The prevalence of Blastocystis infection was 38% in patients from the Department of Tropical Medicine and 18% in patients from other departments.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>A high prevalence of Blastocystis infection was found with both advanced microscopy and sequence-confirmed PCR in our patient population. Most cases were caused by subtypes ST1, ST2, ST3 and ST4. A significantly higher prevalence was found among patients with a history of recent travel to tropical countries.
- Subjects
NETHERLANDS; BLASTOCYSTIS; BLASTOCYSTIDA; PARASITOLOGY; DISEASE prevalence
- Publication
BMC Infectious Diseases, 2013, Vol 13, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
1471-2334
- Publication type
journal article
- DOI
10.1186/1471-2334-13-389