TY - JOUR
T1 - Cryptosporidium parvum - Specific antibody responses among children residing in Milwaukee during the 1993 waterborne outbreak
AU - McDonald, Alicia C.
AU - Mac Kenzie, William R.
AU - Addiss, David G.
AU - Gradus, Stephen
AU - Linke, George
AU - Zembrowski, Elizabeth
AU - Hurd, Margaret R.
AU - Arrowood, Michael J.
AU - Lammie, Patrick J.
AU - Priest, Jeffrey W.
N1 - Funding Information:
1Division of Parasitic Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and 2Atlanta Research and Education Foundation, Atlanta, Georgia; 3City of Milwaukee Bureau of Public Health Laboratories, Milwaukee, Wisconsin
PY - 2001/5/1
Y1 - 2001/5/1
N2 - A major gastroenteritis outbreak among >400,000 residents of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in April 1993 was attributed to Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts in drinking water. Plasma specimens obtained from children (6 months to 12 years old) for routine blood lead level surveillance March- May 1993 were assayed by ELISA for levels of IgG antibody against the immunodominant Triton-17 and 27-kDa C. parvum antigens. Over a 5-week period, the seroprevalence for antibodies to the 2 antigens increased from 15% to 82% and from 17% to 87%, respectively, in samples from children living in southern ZIP code areas (n = 218), whereas smaller increases (20% to 43% and 22% to 46%, respectively) were noted among samples from children living in northern ZIP code areas (n = 335; P<.0001). The results demonstrate that C. parvum infection was much more widespread than previously appreciated and confirm that infection was associated with residence in the area served by the southern water treatment plant.
AB - A major gastroenteritis outbreak among >400,000 residents of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in April 1993 was attributed to Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts in drinking water. Plasma specimens obtained from children (6 months to 12 years old) for routine blood lead level surveillance March- May 1993 were assayed by ELISA for levels of IgG antibody against the immunodominant Triton-17 and 27-kDa C. parvum antigens. Over a 5-week period, the seroprevalence for antibodies to the 2 antigens increased from 15% to 82% and from 17% to 87%, respectively, in samples from children living in southern ZIP code areas (n = 218), whereas smaller increases (20% to 43% and 22% to 46%, respectively) were noted among samples from children living in northern ZIP code areas (n = 335; P<.0001). The results demonstrate that C. parvum infection was much more widespread than previously appreciated and confirm that infection was associated with residence in the area served by the southern water treatment plant.
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U2 - 10.1086/319862
DO - 10.1086/319862
M3 - Article
C2 - 11294669
AN - SCOPUS:0035341867
SN - 0022-1899
VL - 183
SP - 1373
EP - 1379
JO - Journal of Infectious Diseases
JF - Journal of Infectious Diseases
IS - 9
ER -