2013
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0070076
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Low C-Reactive Protein Levels in a Traditional West-African Population Living in a Malaria Endemic Area

Abstract: BackgroundC-reactive protein (CRP) levels are reported to be elevated in populations of African descent living in affluent environments compared to populations of European ancestry. However, the natural history of CRP levels in populations of African descent living under adverse environments remains largely unknown.MethodsCRP levels were measured with a high sensitivity assay in 624 apparently healthy individuals who contributed blood as part of a study on innate immune responsiveness in a traditional Ghanaian… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…Indeed it has been shown that in the Garu-Tempani district in the Upper East region of Ghana, CRP values as high as 24.6mg/l were recorded and this was attributed to immune response to P . Falciparum parasitaemia[ 38 ]. This work is sited around similar setting in the Upper East region and therefore the high CRP is not surprising because samples were collected throughout the year during some point when malaria or P .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed it has been shown that in the Garu-Tempani district in the Upper East region of Ghana, CRP values as high as 24.6mg/l were recorded and this was attributed to immune response to P . Falciparum parasitaemia[ 38 ]. This work is sited around similar setting in the Upper East region and therefore the high CRP is not surprising because samples were collected throughout the year during some point when malaria or P .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Evidence for such an association between early acute and late chronic inflammation is, however, mixed. For instance, high exposure to microbial infection in a human cohort in the Philippines correlated with lower C‐reactive protein level during adulthood (McDade, Rutherford, Adair, & Kuzawa, ), and a Ghanaian cohort living in a malaria endemic area had inherently similar CRP levels to a Dutch cohort (Eriksson, van Bodegom, May, Boef, & Westendorp, ). There are also many reports suggesting that early exposure to microbes might have an “educational” role for the immune system by stimulating regulatory mechanisms that prevent autoimmune damage (Rook, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, humans coevolved with a variety of viruses, bacteria and other microbes 82 , and while chronic infections appear to contribute to SCI, they are not likely the primary driver. For instance, populations of hunter-gatherers and other existing non-industrialized societies such as the Shuar hunter-gatherers of the Ecuadorian Amazon 83,84 , Tsimané forager-horticulturalists of Bolivia 68 , Hadza hunter-gatherers from Tanzania 67 , subsistence agriculturalists from rural Ghana 85 and traditional horticulturalists of Kitava (Papua New Guinea) 86 -all of whom are minimally exposed to industrialized environments but highly exposed to a variety of microbes-exhibit very low rates of inflammation-related chronic disease and substantial fluctuations in inflammatory markers that do not increase with age 65,67,68,83,86 .…”
Section: Sources Of Systemic Chronic Inflammationmentioning
confidence: 99%