Shigella as a Cause of Diarrhea Hospitalization in Children Under Five: Evaluation by Conventional and Molecular Methods

CUREUS JOURNAL OF MEDICAL SCIENCE(2023)

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摘要
Background and objectives: Shigella is an important cause of diarrhea in children under five, often missed by conventional laboratory methods. Blood in stools has always been a syndromic indicator for Shigella diarrhea, but most cases present with watery diarrhea without blood. This study aimed to determine the frequency of Shigella detected by molecular and conventional methods in children under five. Additionally, we aimed to study the clinical profile and outcome of children with Shigella diarrhea managed as per current diarrhea treatment guidelines. Methods: In this hospital-based prospective observational study, stool samples from 150 children (age range: one month to five years) with acute diarrhea (duration < seven days) were subjected to routine microscopic examination, stool culture, and DNA extraction. The extracted DNA from stored stool samples was subjected to polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification using a specific primer for the invasion plasmid antigen H gene sequence (ipaH) gene at 424 bp. Results were interpreted in the context of the percentage of isolation of Shigella by molecular (PCR) and conventional methods (stool microscopy and culture) and the follow-up outcome in terms of recurrence of diarrhea or dysentery and growth faltering over three months after discharge. Results: Shigella infection was diagnosed in stool samples by PCR from 13 (8.7%) children, whereas it was isolated by conventional stool culture in only one (0.7%) child. The sensitivity of culture was only 7.7% against PCR for the diagnosis of Shigella infection, whereas blood in stools had a sensitivity of 15.4%. The majority of Shigella PCR-positive cases (11 out of 13) presented with non-bloody diarrhea. None of the evaluated clinical predictors had a significant association with the Shigella infection. No statistically significant difference was found between PCR-positive and PCR-negative children at the end of follow-up (P>0.05). Conclusion: The majority of children with Shigella infection present with watery diarrhea rather than bloody diarrhea, and a history of blood in stools is a poor marker for the diagnosis of shigellosis. The diagnostic performance of stool culture is also very low compared to stool PCR for the diagnosis of Shigella diarrhea.
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关键词
under-five children,under-five diarrhea,acute infectious diarrhea,shigella,stool culture,polymerase chain reaction,dysentery,diagnosis,children
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