Abstract
Allergies and autoimmune disorders are less prevalent in areas where parasitic infections are abundant. The relationship between schistosomiasis, Chitinase 3-Like 1 protein (YKL-40), an inflammatory marker, and antinuclear antibodies (ANA), an allergy marker, was investigated in pre-school-aged children (1-5years old) living in an area endemic to Schistosoma haematobium infection. Cross-sectional study including 145 participants, 66 females and 79 males. S. haematobium infection was diagnosed using the urine filtration technique. Levels of YKL-40 and antinuclear antibodies concentrations were determined using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. The prevalence of S. haematobium infection was 21.4 % (n=31) with 114 not infected, 18 with light and 13 with moderate infections. YKL-40 levels were higher in the S. haematobium-infected group than in the uninfected group (P=0.038). However, S. haematobium infection intensity did not correlate with YKL-40 levels. ANA levels were significantly higher in uninfected children than in infected children (P=0.028). There was a significant inverse relationship between ANA levels and schistosome infection intensity (r = -0.225, P=0.016). The correlation between ANA levels and YKL-40 levels was not significant. Inflammatory marker in pre-school-aged children living in an area endemic for schistosomiasis indicate YKL-40 as a possible biomarker of S. haematobium infection in pre-school-aged children, warranting further investigations in a longitudinal study. The study gives an insight into allergyas ANA levels were higher in schistosome-uninfected than infected participants, further studies on allergies are needed.
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