Fungal infection risk groups among school children
Fungal infection risk groups among school children
Blog Article
The aim of the study was to evaluate the relationship between ocurrence of fungi in children and living environment (city - countryside), sex, age, diet, undergone diseases therapy with antibiotics and exposure to hospital environment, and to indicate children potentially vulnerable to fungal infections.The material was consisted of swabs collected from the oral cavily, the throat and the nose of healthy children, aged 6-9 and 10-15, from both urban and rural environmens.Candida albicans, the basic aetiological factor in thc majority of mycoses recorded in humans, unquestionably prevailed in the group of the 13 speciec of yeast-like ilootpaperie fungi and yeasts isolated.
Records of C.glabrata and C.krusei increasing numbers of whose strains show resistance to basic antimycoties, as well as relatively frequent records of Trichosporon beigelii, Saccharomycopsis capsularis and Saccharomyces sp.
, fungi whose expansiveness and enzymatic activity have been growing, may be considered disconcerting.Vulnerability to fungal infection increases following anti-bacterial antibiotic therapy in the majority of subjects regardless season or age.This is particularly true primarily of the most stable ontocoenosis of the throat.
Younger children, on the other hand, are the most vulnerable foUowing infection of the respiratory system.Fungi are likely to colonise the nose in this case.Children living in the countryside who had been ll immediately prior to the collection of the material constitute the highest risk group of the here occurrence of fungi in any of the ontocoenoses studied.
A greater number of positive inoculations were recorded in these children in comparison to the children from the city.It may be indicative of a more extensive spectrum of natural reservoirs of fungi and the vectors of their transmission in rural areas than those in the city, lower health hygiene and lower immunity or of a more common carriage of fungi among rural children.