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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., 01 1996, 47-54, Vol 62, No. 1
J Isaac-Renton, W Moorehead and A Ross
Giardia cyst concentrations were determined in an inventory of 153 raw and
91 chlorinated drinking water samples collected at 86 sites from throughout
the western Canadian province of British Columbia. Sixty- four percent of
raw water samples were cyst positive (69% of sites). Cyst concentrations
were lower in chlorinated than in raw water. The viability of cysts in
drinking water samples assessed by infectivity in Mongolian gerbils
(Meriones unguiculatus) was decreased in chlorinated water. Two rural
communities using Giardia-contaminated surface drinking water sources were
selected for longitudinal studies including drinking water testing and
serological studies of residents. Three hundred thirty-six raw and treated
samples from these communities were collected over 24 months. Cyst
concentrations and viability were assessed in a 12-month study of each
community. Parasite concentrations were lower in chlorinated water than in
raw water in both communities. Cyst concentrations were lower in
reservoir-settled water than in raw water. Viability, assessed by animal
infectivity and corrected for inoculum, decreased following reservoir
settling as well as after chlorination. A bolus or spiking phenomenon of
cysts was observed in both community drinking water systems and deserves
further study. A striking seasonal pattern was seen in one community but
not in the second. The seroprevalence data and number of
laboratory-confirmed cases identified in each year-long community study are
consistent with the possibility that low-level endemic transmission is
occurring.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
Longitudinal studies of Giardia contamination in two community drinking water supplies: cyst levels, parasite viability, and health impact
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
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