Trichuriasis

 

Introduction

 

Agent

 

History of Discovery

 

Symptoms

 

Diagnosis andTreatment

 

Epidemiology

 

Links and Refrences

 

Contact

 

 

Epidemiology

tralalalalalalalalalala

Although it can be found almost all over the world, Trichuriasis is common in tropical areas with poor sanitation. Worms require hot and humid environments to develop outside the host in the soil. However, sanitation is key in predicting wheather or not a particular area is endemic. The less sanitation and seperation of feces and food, the more T. trichiura infections an area will have. In places where human feces are used as fertilizers, whipworm infections are common and hard to eliminate from the polulation. In some parts of Asia prevalence rates are as high as 50 to 80%.

The estimated numbers of the number of people infected worldwide covers a large range, although it is generally agreed that somewhere around 500 million people are infected. This makes it the third most common nematode infection in the world.

 

Worldwide estimate of Trichuris trichiura infections
(in millions)

Walsh and Warren (1979)
500
Markell and Voge (1981)
350
W.H.O. (1986)
500
Cooper and Bundy (1988)
500-800
Peters and Gilles (1989)
670

Adapted from The Guide to Human Helminths


Whipworm can be found all over the world, including Europe and North America where it is most frequent in rural areas of the southeast. In a study conducted by the CDC and state health departments in 1987 1.2% of 216,275 random stool samples were found to be infected with Trichuris trichiura. The only nematode to occur more often in the study was Ascaris.