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Volume 6

Journal of Infectious Diseases & Therapy

Tropical & Bacterial Diseases 2018

December 05-06, 2018

Page 56

Notes:

conference

series

.com

Annual Conference on

Bacterial, Viral and Infectious Diseases

&

Neglected Tropical Diseases Congress: The Future Challenges

December 05-06, 2018 Dubai, UAE

Prevalence of cryptosporidiosis in children from minority group in Slovakia

Ingrid Babinsk

a

, Monika Hal

a

nov

a

, Veronika Bedn

a

rov

a

, Zuzana Kalinov

a

and Lenka Cechov

a

Pavol Jozef Safarik University, Slovakia

I

n present, intestinal parasitic infections remain a serious public health problem globally concern in both developed and developing

countries. One of them is

cryptosporidiosis

, a diarrheal disease caused by protozoan parasites of the genus

Cryptosporidium

. In human,

two species –

Cryptosporidium hominis

and

Cryptosporidium parvum

are of major significance to public health. Infection is endemic in

places with poor sanitation and crowded living conditions and is associated with source of water supply, age and socioeconomic status.

In Slovakia, such places largely representing the Roma settlements and housing. Because

Cryptosporidiosis

is potentially life-threatening

in immunocompromised persons and younger children between 1 and 5 years, which are more susceptible to infection than others, for

the presence of

Cryptosporidium

antigen we examined a total of 81 asymptomatic children aged 0-14 years of Roma national minority

coming from settlements of Eastern Slovakia. The faecal samples were analysed by ELISA method and by modified Kinyoun’s acid-fast

stain. The overall positive percentage was 44.4%. All faecal samples were parallel examined by the modified Kinyoun’s acid-fast stain,

which had a lower detection rate. The finding of large numbers of oocysts was observed mostly at absorbance between 0.575 OD to

2.066 OD.

Biography

Ingrid Babinska has completed her Graduation as a Medical Doctor in 1995 at the Medical Faculty, Pavol Jozef Safarik University, completed three years of study

Master of Public Health (2005) and finished PhD study in Public Health (2014). Currently, she is working as a Assistant Professor in the Department of Epidemiology,

Medical Faculty, Pavol Jozef Safarik University. She is a member of several research team. Her research is in the field of public health and epidemiology with a

particular focus on socio-economically disadvantaged groups. She has published 36 scientific papers and abstracts.

ingrid.babinska@upjs.sk

Ingrid Babinska et al., J Infect Dis Ther 2018, Volume 6

DOI: 10.4172/2332-0877-C7-057