Human giardiasis in Serbia: asymptomatic vs symptomatic infection*
Despite the public health importance of giardiasis in all of Europe, reliable data on the incidence and prevalence in Western Balkan Countries (Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro and FYR Macedonia) are scarce, and the relative contribution of waterborne and food-borne, or person-to-...
Ausführliche Beschreibung
Autor*in: |
Nikolić A. [verfasserIn] Klun I. [verfasserIn] Bobić B. [verfasserIn] Ivović V. [verfasserIn] Vujanić M. [verfasserIn] Živković T. [verfasserIn] Djurković-Djaković O. [verfasserIn] |
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E-Artikel |
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Sprache: |
Englisch |
Erschienen: |
2011 |
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Übergeordnetes Werk: |
In: Parasite ; 18(2011), 2, Seite 197-201 volume:18 ; year:2011 ; number:2 ; pages:197-201 |
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Links: |
Link aufrufen |
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DOI / URN: |
10.1051/parasite/2011182197 |
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DOAJ057988811 |
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10.1051/parasite/2011182197 doi (DE-627)DOAJ057988811 (DE-599)DOAJ9d1d025c807e4d9993cd1c0217320264 DE-627 ger DE-627 rakwb eng RC109-216 Nikolić A. verfasserin aut Human giardiasis in Serbia: asymptomatic vs symptomatic infection* 2011 Text txt rdacontent Computermedien c rdamedia Online-Ressource cr rdacarrier Despite the public health importance of giardiasis in all of Europe, reliable data on the incidence and prevalence in Western Balkan Countries (Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro and FYR Macedonia) are scarce, and the relative contribution of waterborne and food-borne, or person-to-person and/or animalto- person, transmission of human giardiasis is not yet clear. To provide baseline data for the estimation of the public health risk caused by Giardia, we here review the information available on the epidemiological characteristics of asymptomatic and symptomatic human infection in Serbia. Although asymptomatic cases of Giardia represent a major proportion of the total cases of infection, high rates of Giardia infection were found in both asymptomatic and symptomatic populations. No waterborne outbreaks of giardiasis have been reported, and it thus seems that giardiasis mostly occurs sporadically in our milieu. Under such circumstances, control measures to reduce the high prevalence of giardiasis in Serbia have focused on person-to-person transmission, encouraging proper hygiene, but for more targeted intervention measures, studies to identify other risk factors for asymptomatic and symptomatic infections are needed. Giardia humans asymptomatic infection symptomatic infection Serbia Infectious and parasitic diseases Klun I. verfasserin aut Bobić B. verfasserin aut Ivović V. verfasserin aut Vujanić M. verfasserin aut Živković T. verfasserin aut Djurković-Djaković O. verfasserin aut In Parasite 18(2011), 2, Seite 197-201 volume:18 year:2011 number:2 pages:197-201 https://doi.org/10.1051/parasite/2011182197 kostenfrei https://doaj.org/article/9d1d025c807e4d9993cd1c0217320264 kostenfrei http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/parasite/2011182197 kostenfrei https://doaj.org/toc/1252-607X Journal toc kostenfrei https://doaj.org/toc/1776-1042 Journal toc kostenfrei GBV_USEFLAG_A SYSFLAG_A GBV_DOAJ AR 18 2011 2 197-201 |
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Human giardiasis in Serbia: asymptomatic vs symptomatic infection* |
abstract |
Despite the public health importance of giardiasis in all of Europe, reliable data on the incidence and prevalence in Western Balkan Countries (Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro and FYR Macedonia) are scarce, and the relative contribution of waterborne and food-borne, or person-to-person and/or animalto- person, transmission of human giardiasis is not yet clear. To provide baseline data for the estimation of the public health risk caused by Giardia, we here review the information available on the epidemiological characteristics of asymptomatic and symptomatic human infection in Serbia. Although asymptomatic cases of Giardia represent a major proportion of the total cases of infection, high rates of Giardia infection were found in both asymptomatic and symptomatic populations. No waterborne outbreaks of giardiasis have been reported, and it thus seems that giardiasis mostly occurs sporadically in our milieu. Under such circumstances, control measures to reduce the high prevalence of giardiasis in Serbia have focused on person-to-person transmission, encouraging proper hygiene, but for more targeted intervention measures, studies to identify other risk factors for asymptomatic and symptomatic infections are needed. |
abstractGer |
Despite the public health importance of giardiasis in all of Europe, reliable data on the incidence and prevalence in Western Balkan Countries (Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro and FYR Macedonia) are scarce, and the relative contribution of waterborne and food-borne, or person-to-person and/or animalto- person, transmission of human giardiasis is not yet clear. To provide baseline data for the estimation of the public health risk caused by Giardia, we here review the information available on the epidemiological characteristics of asymptomatic and symptomatic human infection in Serbia. Although asymptomatic cases of Giardia represent a major proportion of the total cases of infection, high rates of Giardia infection were found in both asymptomatic and symptomatic populations. No waterborne outbreaks of giardiasis have been reported, and it thus seems that giardiasis mostly occurs sporadically in our milieu. Under such circumstances, control measures to reduce the high prevalence of giardiasis in Serbia have focused on person-to-person transmission, encouraging proper hygiene, but for more targeted intervention measures, studies to identify other risk factors for asymptomatic and symptomatic infections are needed. |
abstract_unstemmed |
Despite the public health importance of giardiasis in all of Europe, reliable data on the incidence and prevalence in Western Balkan Countries (Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro and FYR Macedonia) are scarce, and the relative contribution of waterborne and food-borne, or person-to-person and/or animalto- person, transmission of human giardiasis is not yet clear. To provide baseline data for the estimation of the public health risk caused by Giardia, we here review the information available on the epidemiological characteristics of asymptomatic and symptomatic human infection in Serbia. Although asymptomatic cases of Giardia represent a major proportion of the total cases of infection, high rates of Giardia infection were found in both asymptomatic and symptomatic populations. No waterborne outbreaks of giardiasis have been reported, and it thus seems that giardiasis mostly occurs sporadically in our milieu. Under such circumstances, control measures to reduce the high prevalence of giardiasis in Serbia have focused on person-to-person transmission, encouraging proper hygiene, but for more targeted intervention measures, studies to identify other risk factors for asymptomatic and symptomatic infections are needed. |
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title_short |
Human giardiasis in Serbia: asymptomatic vs symptomatic infection* |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1051/parasite/2011182197 https://doaj.org/article/9d1d025c807e4d9993cd1c0217320264 http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/parasite/2011182197 https://doaj.org/toc/1252-607X https://doaj.org/toc/1776-1042 |
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author2 |
Klun I. Bobić B. Ivović V. Vujanić M. Živković T. Djurković-Djaković O. |
author2Str |
Klun I. Bobić B. Ivović V. Vujanić M. Živković T. Djurković-Djaković O. |
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RC - Internal Medicine |
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doi_str |
10.1051/parasite/2011182197 |
callnumber-a |
RC109-216 |
up_date |
2024-07-03T15:19:48.612Z |
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1803571679581962240 |
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