The Trichuris trichiura worm burdens of 23 children living in a Place-of-Safety in Kingston, Jamaica, were assessed by stool collection for more than five days after treatment with mebendazole. This procedure was repeated after a seven-month period of natural re-infection. For both collections the maximum rate of worm expulsion was achieved on the fourth day after starting treatment. The worm population distributions were overdispersed and well described by the negative binomial probability model (k = 0.29) in each case. For any one individual, the number of worms passed on the first expulsion was unrelated, absolutely or relatively, to the number passed on the second. These data suggest that: knowledge of the time dependency of helminth expulsion is essential for the accurate estimation of worm burdens by this method; populations of Trichuris are more highly aggregated than those of Ascaris and may thus be more susceptible to control by selective rather than random chemotherapy; and the inherent predisposition of hosts to infection may be of minor importance in determining the distribution of worms in the population-heavily infected hosts appear no more or less likely to acquire large worm burdens on subsequent exposures.
Two rural Tanzanian primary schools were surveyed to test the hypothesis that parasitic infestation prevents the development of asthma. 242 pupils were interviewed to determine the prevalence of pupils with recurrent episodes of wheezing. The nineteen pupils so discovered had more exercise-induced bronchial lability than equivalently exercised controls. More girls (12-8%) than boys (3-3%) had asthma. In one school, 77% of the controls had faecal parasites, mainly Ascaris spp., and in the other school 55% of the controls had Schistosoma haematobium in their urine. Parasites were found in similar proportions in the asthmatics. The mean serum IgE for the whole population was 3174 u/ml with no demonstrable difference between the asthmatics and controls. There was no difference in immediate cutaneous hypersensitivity to twenty-two allergens between the asthmatics and controls. These findings suggest that parasitic infestation does not prevent the development of asthma. D 445
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