• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: The Spectrum of Cholera in Rural East I. Correlation of Bacteriologic and Serologic Results
  • Contributor: Woodward, William E.; Mosley, Wiley H.; McCormack, William M.
  • Published: University of Chicago Press, 1970
  • Published in: The Journal of Infectious Diseases, 121 (1970), Seite S10-S16
  • Language: English
  • ISSN: 0022-1899
  • Keywords: Session I: Epidemiologic Studies, Vaccine Trials, and Immune Response
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: <p>A group of 107 children was studied intensely throughout the course of a large epidemic of cholera in 1 village of East Pakistan. The overall rate of infection was 18.7%, and infection rates decreased with increasing age. The ratio of nonhospitalized to hospitalized infections was 5:1. The percentage of detectable titers of vibriocidal antibody in blood specimens obtained before the epidemic increased markedly with age, while that of toxin-neutralization antibody titers declined slightly. Detectable, initial vibriocidal titers were associated with a lower rate of infection than were undetectable titers. The situation was reversed with regard to toxin-neutralization levels, although the presence of detectable titers tended to be associated with milder disease. All 20 infections were discovered by daily rectal swab cultures, while a 4-fold increase in vibriocidal titer was present in only 12 of these individuals, and an absolute rise of 20 or more antitoxin units/ml was present in 10. The duration of excretion of vibrios was significantly less in individuals who did not convert serologically.</p>