Abstract

BackgroundInfections with the food-borne trematode Opisthorchis viverinni are common in Southeast Asia. In Lao PDR alone, two million people are supposed to be infected. Opisthorchiasis may cause severe liver disease, eventually leading to cholangiocarcinoma. The objective of this study is to assess the eating habits, complaints, symptoms, signs and ultrasonographical findings in three different areas of Savannakhet Province.MethodsStudy participants were recruited in Lahanam village in the flood-prone lowland of, Sonkhone district, Savannakhet Province (group A); in Non Somboon village, a community located on a hilly plateau in the same district (group B); and in staff of Savannakhet Province Hospital, Savannakhet town (group C). Eating habits, complaints and symptoms were recorded by standardized structured questionnaires. Participants were thoroughly examined clinically, and ultrasonography was performed. O. viverrini eggs were looked for in stool and in duodenal fluid. An array of biochemical and haematological parameters potentially related to liver disease was determined. Group A consisted of 45, group B of 31 and group C of 18 individuals.ResultsEating habits were similar in the three groups, except that participants from group C tended to consume less high-risk types of fish dishes and more frequently ate beef and pork. Average intensity of infection (eggs per gram of stool) was low, but significantly higher in group A than in group B and C (p < 0.001). Medical history and complaints were similar in the three groups. Ultrasonography did not reveal any bile duct pathology. The only pathological finding was a slight elevation of ASAT and gamma-GT in a few participants in groups A and B.ConclusionsThe study shows that eating habits favouring the infection with O. viverrini are common in south Laos. Although the average intensity of infection was low, there was a significant difference between the groups, paralleling slightly different eating habits. Clinically, this corresponded to a paucity of liver disease-associated complaints and signs. The low intensity of infection probably explains why no alterations of bile ducts were detectable by ultrasonography.

Highlights

  • Infections with the food-borne trematode Opisthorchis viverinni are common in Southeast Asia

  • Eating habits are deeply rooted in local culture and include a variety of meals and dishes putatively containing infectious metacercariae such as Koi-pa dip, Laap-pa dip and Laap-sa pa [10]

  • O. viverrini infection is widely distributed in the four Southeast Asia countries: Thailand, Cambodia, Lao PDR and Vietnam, but the prevalence and the intensity of infection vary widely

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Summary

Introduction

Infections with the food-borne trematode Opisthorchis viverinni are common in Southeast Asia. Opisthorchiasis may cause severe liver disease, eventually leading to cholangiocarcinoma. The oriental liver flukes (Opisthorchis viverrini, Opisthorchis felineus, Chlonorchis sinensis) are important causes of human disease. In 2005, the total number of individuals infected with Opisthorchis spp. alone was estimated to be 8.4 million [1]. In Southeast Asia, Feldmeier et al Tropical Medicine and Health (2016) 44:12 prevalence of 10.9 % and a maximum of 32.2 [4]. The prevalence of O. viverrini in Sanvannakhet Province is estimated to be 36 % (Pongvongsa Tiengkham, unpublished observation 2008). There is reason to assume that liver fluke disease occurs in all parts of the country, even in the surroundings of Vientiane [5]. Prevalence of human infection essentially depend on the population’s eating customs [6]

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