2001
DOI: 10.4269/ajtmh.2001.65.652
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Pre-exposure anti-Campylobacter jejuni immunoglobulin a levels associated with reduced risk of Campylobacter diarrhea in adults traveling to Thailand.

Abstract: Abstract. Diarrhea history questionnaires were administered to 369 U.S. military volunteers before and after deployment to Thailand. Additionally, blood samples obtained from a subset of 221 volunteers 1-3 weeks previously and 3-4 weeks after their deployment were tested by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for immunoglobulin A to Campylobacter jejuni. Stool samples from personnel (including volunteers) contracting diarrhea in Thailand were cultured for enteric pathogens. Overall, 35.2% (130 of 369) of questio… Show more

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Cited by 27 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…This is due to a higher environmental burden, poorer standards of food preparation hygiene and possibly the presence of "new" Campylobacter types. The number of travelers suffering enteritis on return home, varies with both the countries of origin and of travel, but Campylobacter is a frequent cause (Mattila et al 1992;Ekdahl and Giesecke 2004), particularly in Southeast Asia (Riddle et al 2006;Walz et al 2001). As mentioned previously, the symptoms of campylobacteriosis experienced have the same spectrum regardless of whether the infection was acquired abroad or at home suggesting that strain virulence properties are not geographically distinct.…”
Section: Investigation Of Travelers/migrantsmentioning
confidence: 84%
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“…This is due to a higher environmental burden, poorer standards of food preparation hygiene and possibly the presence of "new" Campylobacter types. The number of travelers suffering enteritis on return home, varies with both the countries of origin and of travel, but Campylobacter is a frequent cause (Mattila et al 1992;Ekdahl and Giesecke 2004), particularly in Southeast Asia (Riddle et al 2006;Walz et al 2001). As mentioned previously, the symptoms of campylobacteriosis experienced have the same spectrum regardless of whether the infection was acquired abroad or at home suggesting that strain virulence properties are not geographically distinct.…”
Section: Investigation Of Travelers/migrantsmentioning
confidence: 84%
“…Similarly, among U.S. expatriates living in Thailand, Campylobacter was isolated more frequently from diarrheic stools if the patients had lived there less than 1 year (Gaudio et al 1996). Moreover, Walz et al (2001) found that those U.S. military volunteers, who had low pre-travel anti-C. jejuni titers, before deployment to Thailand, were more likely to have had diarrhea during their tour of duty compared with those with high pre-travel titers.…”
Section: Investigation Of Travelers/migrantsmentioning
confidence: 93%
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“…Reduced C. jejuni-associated diarrhea rates correlated with increased levels of Campylobacter-specific IgA antibody in chronic consumers of raw milk on dairy farms compared to individuals exposed to raw milk for the first time, as well as a lower risk of diarrhea for travelers to regions where C. jejuni is hyperendemic (10,11,51). Black and colleagues performed the initial study of an experimental C. jejuni infection in humans (5a, 7).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These data are consistent with clinical observations of inflammatory diarrhea. For humoral immunity, a large number of trials have demonstrated the production of Campylobacter-specific antibodies in response to infection or exposure; however, it is unknown which (if any) antibodies represent correlates of immunity (24,40,41,46). In our subjects, IgG (plasma and antibody-secreting cell) responses were not uniformly positive in all subjects; IgG may be less critical for the control of this nonsystemic infection.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 73%