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Dive into the research topics where Paul T. Cantey is active.

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Featured researches published by Paul T. Cantey.


Transfusion | 2012

The United States Trypanosoma cruzi Infection Study: evidence for vector-borne transmission of the parasite that causes Chagas disease among United States blood donors.

Paul T. Cantey; Susan L. Stramer; Rebecca L. Townsend; Hany Kamel; Karen Ofafa; Charles W. Todd; Mary M. Currier; Sheryl Hand; Wendy Varnado; Ellen M. Dotson; Chris Hall; Pamela L. Jett; Susan P. Montgomery

BACKGROUND: Screening US blood donors for Trypanosoma cruzi infection is identifying autochthonous, chronic infections. Two donors in Mississippi were identified through screening and investigated as probable domestically acquired vector‐borne infections, and the US T. cruzi Infection Study was conducted to evaluate the burden of and describe putative risk factors for vector‐borne infection in the United States.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2012

Neurocysticercosis: Neglected but Not Forgotten

Christina M. Coyle; Siddhartha Mahanty; Joseph R. Zunt; Mitchell T. Wallin; Paul T. Cantey; A. Clinton White; Seth E. O'Neal; Jose A. Serpa; Paul M. Southern; Patricia P. Wilkins; Anne McCarthy; Elizabeth S. Higgs; Theodore E. Nash

Neurocysticercosis (NCC) is an infection of the central nervous system caused by the larval form of the tapeworm Taenia solium. Infections occur following the accidental ingestion of tapeworm ova found in human feces. NCC is a major cause of epilepsy and disability in many of the worlds poorer countries where families raise free-roaming pigs that are able to ingest human feces. It is frequently diagnosed in immigrant populations in the United States and Canada, reflecting the high endemicity of the infection in their countries of origin [1]. Although parenchymal cysts are the most common location in the brain and cause seizures, cysts may also be present in the ventricles, meninges, spinal cord, eye, and subarachnoid spaces. Involvement in these other sites may result in aberrant growth (racemose cysts) and complicated disease that is difficult to treat and may cause increased morbidity and mortality.


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2014

Neglected Parasitic Infections in the United States: Chagas Disease

Susan P. Montgomery; Michelle C. Starr; Paul T. Cantey; Morven S. Edwards; Sheba Meymandi

Chagas disease, which is caused by the protozoan parasite Trypanosoma cruzi, can lead to severe cardiac and gastrointestinal disease. Most persons acquire this infection through contact with vector bugs carrying T. cruzi in endemic areas of Latin America. Infection can also be acquired by congenital, transfusion, transplantation, and foodborne transmission. Although an estimated 300,000 persons with Chagas disease live in the United States, little is known about the burden of chagasic heart disease. It is not known how often congenital or vector-borne transmission of T. cruzi occurs in the United States, although it is known that infected mothers and infected vector bugs are found in this country. Better diagnostic tests and treatment drugs are needed to improve patient care, and research is needed to define transmission risks and develop strategies to prevent new infections and reduce the burden of disease.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2010

Increasing Compliance with Mass Drug Administration Programs for Lymphatic Filariasis in India through Education and Lymphedema Management Programs

Paul T. Cantey; Jonathan Rout; Grace Rao; John Williamson; LeAnne M. Fox

Background Nearly 45% of people living at risk for lymphatic filariasis (LF) worldwide live in India. India has faced challenges obtaining the needed levels of compliance with its mass drug administration (MDA) program to interrupt LF transmission, which utilizes diethylcarbamazine (DEC) or DEC plus albendazole. Previously identified predictors of and barriers to compliance with the MDA program were used to refine a pre-MDA educational campaign. The objectives of this study were to assess the impact of these refinements and of a lymphedema morbidity management program on MDA compliance. Methods/Principal Findings A randomized, 30-cluster survey was performed in each of 3 areas: the community-based pre-MDA education plus community-based lymphedema management education (Com-MDA+LM) area, the community-based pre-MDA education (Com-MDA) area, and the Indian standard pre-MDA education (MDA-only) area. Compliance with the MDA program was 90.2% in Com-MDA+LM, 75.0% in Com-MDA, and 52.9% in the MDA-only areas (p<0.0001). Identified barriers to adherence included: 1) fear of side effects and 2) lack of recognition of ones personal benefit from adherence. Multivariable predictors of adherence amenable to educational intervention were: 1) knowing about the MDA in advance of its occurrence, 2) knowing everyone is at risk for LF, 3) knowing that the MDA was for LF, and 4) knowing at least one component of the lymphedema management techniques taught in the lymphedema management program. Conclusions/Significance This study confirmed previously identified predictors of and barriers to compliance with Indias MDA program for LF. More importantly, it showed that targeting these predictors and barriers in a timely and clear pre-MDA educational campaign can increase compliance with MDA programs, and it demonstrated, for the first time, that lymphedema management programs may also increase compliance with MDA programs.


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2013

Zoonotic Onchocerca lupi infection in a 22-month-old child in Arizona: first report in the United States and a review of the literature.

Mark L. Eberhard; Gholamabbas Amin Ostovar; Kote Chundu; Dan Hobohm; Iman Feiz-Erfan; Blaine A. Mathison; Henry S. Bishop; Paul T. Cantey

A 22-month-old girl presented with neck pain and stiffness and magnetic resonance imaging showed an extradural mass extending from C2 through the C4 level with moderate to severe compression of the cord. A left unilateral C2-C4 laminectomy was performed revealing an extradural rubbery tumor; a small biopsy was obtained. Examination of stained tissue revealed the presence of a parasitic worm that was identified as a gravid female Onchocerca lupi. A magnetic resonance imaging at 7 weeks follow-up showed a significantly decreased size of the enhancing lesion and the patients symptoms gradually resolved. This is the first report of zoonotic O. lupi in the United States. The parasite has been reported in dogs and cats in the western United States, and from people in four cases reported from Europe. A great deal more needs to be learned, including full host range and geographic distribution, before we fully understand O. lupi infections in animals and man.


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2014

Neglected Parasitic Infections in the United States: Cysticercosis

Paul T. Cantey; Christina M. Coyle; Frank Sorvillo; Patricia P. Wilkins; Michelle C. Starr; Theodore E. Nash

Cysticercosis is a potentially fatal and preventable neglected parasitic infection caused by the larval form of Taenia solium. Patients with symptomatic disease usually have signs and symptoms of neurocysticercosis, which commonly manifest as seizures or increased intracranial pressure. Although there are many persons living in the United States who emigrated from highly disease-endemic countries and there are foci of autochthonous transmission of the parasite in the United States, little is known about burden and epidemiology of the disease in this country. In addition, despite advances in the diagnosis and management of neurocysticercosis, there remain many unanswered questions. Improving our understanding and management of neurocysticercosis in the United States will require improved surveillance or focused prospective studies in appropriate areas and allocation of resources towards answering some of the key questions discussed in this report.


Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2010

Predictors of compliance with a mass drug administration programme for lymphatic filariasis in Orissa State, India 2008

Paul T. Cantey; G. Rao; J. Rout; LeAnne M. Fox

Objectives  To assess the performance of an educational campaign to increase adherence to a mass‐administered DEC regimen against lymphatic filariasis (LF) in Orissa, and to identify factors that could enhance future campaigns.


The American Journal of Medicine | 2011

Study of Nonoutbreak Giardiasis: Novel Findings and Implications for Research

Paul T. Cantey; Sharon L. Roy; Brian Lee; Alicia Cronquist; Kirk E. Smith; Jennifer L. Liang; Michael J. Beach

BACKGROUND The burden of nonoutbreak-related Giardia infections in the US is poorly understood, with little information on its impact on peoples lives and on unusual manifestations of infection. This study was designed with the objectives of better defining the impact of infection, examining the occurrence of extraintestinal manifestations, and determining risk factors for delayed treatment of infection. METHODS Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network surveillance was used to identify persons with nonoutbreak-related, laboratory-confirmed Giardia infection. People were enrolled into the Risk Factor arm and the Delayed Enrollment arm. Detailed questionnaires collected information on clinical manifestations, impact on activities of daily living, health care utilization, and treatment. RESULTS The study enrolled 290 people. Multivariate predictors of delayed study enrollment, a surrogate for delayed diagnosis of Giardia, included intermittent diarrheal symptoms, delayed time to first health care visit, and income. Decreased ability to participate in ones activities of daily living was reported by 210 (72.4%) participants. Appropriate therapeutic agent for Giardia was received by 237 (81.7%) by the time of study enrollment. Extraintestinal manifestations of Giardia were reported by 72 (33.8%) persons who enrolled in the Risk Factor arm. CONCLUSIONS The presence of intermittent diarrhea contributes to delayed health-seeking behavior and to delayed diagnosis of Giardia. More study is needed to determine if this symptom can help distinguish Giardia from other causes of infectious diarrhea. The occurrence of extraintestinal manifestations of Giardia infection does not appear to be rare, and merits further study.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2016

Evaluation of Lymphatic Filariasis and Onchocerciasis in Three Senegalese Districts Treated for Onchocerciasis with Ivermectin.

Nana Wilson; Alioune Badara Ly; Vitaliano Cama; Paul T. Cantey; Daniel Cohn; Lamine Diawara; Abdel N. Direny; Mawo Fall; Karla R. Feeser; LeAnne M. Fox; Achille Kabore; Amadou F. Seck; Ngayo Sy; Daouda Ndiaye; Christine Dubray

In Africa, onchocerciasis and lymphatic filariasis (LF) are co-endemic in many areas. Current efforts to eliminate both diseases are through ivermectin-based mass drug administration (MDA). Years of ivermectin distribution for onchocerciasis may have interrupted LF transmission in certain areas. The Kédougou region, Senegal, is co-endemic for LF and onchocerciasis. Though MDA for onchocerciasis started in 1988, in 2014 albendazole had not yet been added for LF. The objective of this study was to assess in an integrated manner the LF and onchocerciasis status in the three districts of the Kédougou region after ≥10 years of ivermectin-based MDA. The study employed an African Programme for Onchocerciasis Control (APOC) onchocerciasis-related methodology. In the three districts, 14 villages close to three rivers that have Simulium damnosum breeding sites were surveyed. Convenience sampling of residents ≥5 years old was performed. Assessment for LF antigenemia by immunochromatographic testing (ICT) was added to skin snip microscopy for onchocerciasis. Participants were also tested for antibodies against Wb123 (LF) and Ov16 (onchocerciasis) antigens. In two districts, no participants were ICT or skin snip positive. In the third district, 3.5% were ICT positive and 0.7% were skin snip positive. In all the three districts, Wb123 prevalence was 0.6%. Overall, Ov16 prevalence was 6.9%. Ov16 prevalence among children 5–9 years old in the study was 2.5%. LF antigenemia prevalence was still above treatment threshold in one district despite ≥10 years of ivermectin-based MDA. The presence of Ov16 positive children suggested recent transmission of Onchocerca volvulus. This study showed the feasibility of integrated evaluation of onchocerciasis and LF but development of integrated robust methods for assessing transmission of both LF and onchocerciasis are needed to determine where MDA can be stopped safely in co-endemic areas.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2016

The Emergence of Zoonotic Onchocerca lupi Infection in the United States – A Case-Series

Paul T. Cantey; Jessica Weeks; Morven S. Edwards; Suchitra Rao; G. Amin Ostovar; Walter Dehority; Maria Alzona; Sara Swoboda; Brooke Christiaens; Wassim Ballan; John C. Hartley; Andrew Terranella; James J. Dunn; Douglas P. Marx; M. John Hicks; Ronald A. Rauch; Christiana Smith; Megan K. Dishop; Michael H. Handler; Roy W. R. Dudley; Kote Chundu; Dan Hobohm; Iman Feiz-Erfan; Joseph Hakes; Ryan S. Berry; Shelly Stepensaski; Benjamin Greenfield; Laura Shroeder; Henry S. Bishop; Marcos de Almeida

This case-series describes the 6 human infections with Onchocerca lupi, a parasite known to infect cats and dogs, that have been identified in the United States since 2013. Unlike cases reported outside the country, the American patients have not had subconjunctival nodules but have manifested more invasive disease (eg, spinal, orbital, and subdermal nodules). Diagnosis remains challenging in the absence of a serologic test. Treatment should be guided by what is done for Onchocerca volvulus as there are no data for O. lupi. Available evidence suggests that there may be transmission in southwestern United States, but the risk of transmission to humans is not known. Research is needed to better define the burden of disease in the United States and develop appropriately-targeted prevention strategies.

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Vitaliano Cama

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Henry S. Bishop

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Susan P. Montgomery

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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LeAnne M. Fox

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Mark L. Eberhard

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Martin S. Cetron

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Michelle Weinberg

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Morven S. Edwards

Baylor College of Medicine

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Patricia P. Wilkins

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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