Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-nr4z6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-25T00:15:06.291Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Enteric Fevers and Normal Salmonella Agglutinins in the Gold Coast

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 May 2009

M. H. Hughes
Affiliation:
Late of The Medical Research Institute, Accra, Gold Coast Colony
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Summary

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

Enteric fevers are common in the Gold Coast, where their incidence is increasing owing to insanitary urbanization. Children and migrant labourers form the bulk of the patients. Typhoid fever accounts for three-quarters of the cases, but paratyphoid A and paratyphoid C also occur. The Widal test has attained renewed importance in early diagnosis since the introduction of chloramphenicol, and gave a presumptive diagnosis within 24 hr. in two-thirds of the cases. ‘Normal’ agglutinin levels were determined in 200 sera sent for the Kahn test, and provide data for interpreting the Widal test in the Gold Coast. Low titre H agglutinins in the sera of normal people are thought to indicate past vaccination or infection, but low titre O agglutinins are probably unrelated to either. Agglutination of a Salm. typhi H suspension by normal sera suggests that one adult African in eight in the Gold Coast has suffered from typhoid fever.

I have to thank Lt. Col. H. J. Bensted, O.B.E., M.C., for kindly providing Standard agglutinating sera.

My thanks are also due to Messrs D. Gellatly, A.I.M.L.T., K. C. Lisle, E. S. Martinson and A. T. Nartey for their technical assistance at various times during the past 2½ years.

I am indebted to Dr George Watt, M.B.E., acting Chief Medical Officer, Gold Coast, for permission to publish this paper.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1955

References

Colbourne, M. J. & Edington, G. M. (1954). Mortality from malaria in Accra. J. trop. Med. Hyg. 57, 203–10.Google ScholarPubMed
Cosgrove, P. C. & Reid, J. (1953). Seventeen cases of infection with Salmonella enteritidis. Trans. R. Soc. trop. Med. Hyg. 47, 154—5.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cruickshank, J. C. (1939). Somatic and ‘X’ agglutinins to the Salmonella group. J. Hyg., Camb., 39, 224–37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Duff, D. (1937). In Rep. Med. dep. Gold Cst. 1936, p. 9.Google Scholar
de Glanville, H. (1954). Onchocerca volvulus in a paratyphoid abscess. Brit. med. J. ii, 214.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goodall, E. W. (1928). Goodall and Washbourn's Infectious Diseases. 3rd ed., p. 587. London: Lewis.Google Scholar
Gregory, T. S. & Atkinson, N. (1938). An investigation of the normal agglutinins for typhoid and paratyphoid bacilli in Victoria, and the interpretation of the Widal test. J. Hyg., Camb., 38, 566–74.Google ScholarPubMed
Hughes, M. H. (1954). Salmonella, dublin infections in the Gold Coast. W. Afr. med. J. 3 (N.S.), 5761.Google ScholarPubMed
King, E. D. & Gellatly, D. (1955). A paratyphoid C outbreak in young chickens in the Gold Coast. W. Afr. med. J. 4, (N.S.), 41.Google ScholarPubMed
McLetchie, J. L. (1954). Medical field units in Nigeria. Trans. R. Soc. trop. Med. Hyg. 48, 156–82.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Reid, J. D. (1953). Enteric fever in Sierra Leone: a laboratory investigation. W. Afr. med. J. 2 (N.S.), 84–8.Google Scholar
Report (1954). Rep. med. Dep. Gold Cst. 1952.Google Scholar
Robinson, G. (1934). Rep. med. Dep. Gold Cst. 1933–34, p. 51.Google Scholar
Wilson, G. S. & Miles, A. A. (1946). Topley and Wilson's Principles of Bacteriology and Immunity, 3rd ed., p. 1550. London: Arnold.Google Scholar