International Journal of Infectious Diseases
Volume 14, Issue 9 , Pages e788-e791, September 2010

The effect of Helicobacter pylori infection on growth velocity in young children from poor urban communities in Ecuador

  • Andrey I. Egorov

      Affiliations

    • US Environmental Protection Agency, National Center for Environmental Assessment, 26 W. Martin Luther King Drive, MS A110, Cincinnati, OH 45268, USA
    • Tufts School of Medicine, Department of Public Health and Family Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +1 513 407 5491.
  • ,
  • Fernando Sempértegui

      Affiliations

    • Tufts School of Medicine, Department of Public Health and Family Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
    • Corporación Ecuatoriana de Biotecnología, Quito, Ecuador
    • Facultad de Medicina, Universidad Central del Ecuador, Quito, Ecuador
  • ,
  • Bertha Estrella

      Affiliations

    • Tufts School of Medicine, Department of Public Health and Family Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
    • Corporación Ecuatoriana de Biotecnología, Quito, Ecuador
    • Facultad de Medicina, Universidad Central del Ecuador, Quito, Ecuador
  • ,
  • Josefina Egas

      Affiliations

    • Corporación Ecuatoriana de Biotecnología, Quito, Ecuador
    • Escuela de Bioanálisis, Pontificia Universidad Católica del Ecuador, Quito, Ecuador
  • ,
  • Elena N. Naumova

      Affiliations

    • Tufts School of Medicine, Department of Public Health and Family Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
    • Tufts University Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
  • ,
  • Jeffrey K. Griffiths

      Affiliations

    • Tufts School of Medicine, Department of Public Health and Family Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
    • Tufts University Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy, Boston, Massachusetts, USA

Received 11 December 2009; accepted 8 March 2010. published online 21 July 2010.

Corresponding Editor: William Cameron, Ottawa, Canada

Summary 

Objective

To characterize the potential effects of Helicobacter infections on growth velocity in low socioeconomic status young children in a developing country.

Methods

Children were recruited in poor suburbs of Quito, Ecuador. Normally nourished, mildly and substantially malnourished children (defined using weight-for-age Z-scores at recruitment) formed equal strata. Six height and weight measurements were collected during one year. Enrollment and exit serum samples were analyzed for anti-Helicobacter IgG and exit non-diarrheal feces tested for Helicobacter antigen.

Results

Among 124 participants (enrollment age 19±9 months), 76 (61%) excreted fecal antigen at exit (were infected). Of these, 44 were seropositive at least once (chronic infections) and 32 tested seronegative both times (new or acute phase infections). The adjusted linear growth velocity during follow-up in children with new infections was reduced by 9.7 (3.8, 15.6) mm/year compared to uninfected controls and 6.4 (0.0, 12.9) mm/year compared to children with chronic infections. The effects of Helicobacter infections on ponderal growth were not significant.

Conclusion

These results suggest that linear growth velocity is reduced in young children during the initial phase of Helicobacter infection.

Keywords: Helicobacter pylori, Growth velocity, Children, Fecal antigen, IgG antibody, Ecuador

 

PII: S1201-9712(10)02404-5

doi:10.1016/j.ijid.2010.03.013

International Journal of Infectious Diseases
Volume 14, Issue 9 , Pages e788-e791, September 2010