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Volume 29, Number 1—January 2023
Research

Akkermansia muciniphila Associated with Improved Linear Growth among Young Children, Democratic Republic of the Congo

Christine Marie GeorgeComments to Author , Alves Birindwa, Shan Li, Camille Williams, Jennifer Kuhl, Elizabeth Thomas, Ruthly François, Amani Sanvura Presence, Bisimwa Rusanga Jean Claude, Patrick Mirindi, Lucien Bisimwa, Jamie Perin, and O. Colin Stine
Author affiliations: Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Department of International Health, Baltimore, Maryland, USA, and Bukavu, Democratic Republic of the Congo (C.M. George, A. Birindwa, C. Williams, J. Kuhl, E. Thomas, R. François, A.S. Presence, B.R. Jean Claude, L. Bisimwa, J. Perin); University of Maryland School of Medicine Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, Baltimore (S. Li, O.C. Stine); Food for the Hungry, Washington DC, USA, and Bukavu (P. Mirindi)

Main Article

Table 2

Type and number of enteric pathogens and commensal microbes in feces samples from participants in study of Akkermansia muciniphila association with improved linear growth among young children, Democratic Republic of the Congo

Category No. (%) Median ±SD (range)
Participants with >1 pathogen in feces, n = 236
73 (89)
3 ±1 (0–5)
Pathogen type
Giardia 224 (95) 197 ±170,042 (0–2,258,242)
Shigella 83 (35) 0 ±2,937,024 (0–35,687,711)
Cryptosporidium 11 (5) 0 ±214,213 (0–3,290,838)
Campylobacter jejuni
127 (54)
1.5 ±487,706 (0–4,724,251)
No. pathogens
None 10 (4)
1 58 (25)
2 118 (50)
3 49 (20)
4
1 (1)

Commensal microbes
Akkermansia muciniphila 166 (70) 15 ± 1,196,734 (0–17,730,754)
Lactobacillus salivarius 73 (31) 0 ± 151 (0–1,556)

Main Article

Page created: September 22, 2022
Page updated: December 21, 2022
Page reviewed: December 21, 2022
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