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Journal Article

Citation

Ahmed HJ, Ilardi I, Antognoli A, Leone F, Sebastiani A, Amiconi G. Int. J. STD AIDS 1992; 3(1): 52-53.

Affiliation

Faculty of Medicine, Somali National University, Mogadishu.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1992, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

1543769

Abstract

The physician of an orphanage in Afgoye, 30 km from Mogadishu, Somalia, noticed vaginal discharge in 95 of the 500 girls at the orphanage in September 1987. A Somali-Italian investigative team took vaginal specimens from the 95 girls. Laboratory personnel isolated Neisseria gonorrhoea in 56% of the 95 6-14 year old females (53) who all lived in 2 adjacent dormitories. They found that all the bacterial isolates were of the N. gonorrhoea WI serogroup and Aedih serovar. The physician prescribed penicillin treatment for all the girls. Contact tracing revealed that a male guardian was the source of gonorrhea. Some children had already accused him of sexually abusing them. Orphanage officials had transferred him 1 week before the arrival of the investigative team. His room had been very near to the 2 dormitories for only a few weeks before the investigative team arrived. In this short time, his sexual abuse effected this cluster of infections. This supports the present theory of gonorrhea epidemiology that a core group of infectious people are most likely responsible for most, if not all, of the continuing endemicity of gonorrhea. The infection rate was in range of the estimated probability of transmission (50-70%) during sexual intercourse from an infectious male to a female. The results showed that high resolution typing of gonococci has in addition to its scientific value a more practical value; forensic medicine and illustration that gonorrhea consists of smaller microepidemics.


Language: en

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