Prevalence of Transfusion Transmissible Infection among Healthy Blood Donors at Dongola Specialized Hospital, Sudan, 2010–2015

Background: Blood transfusion saves lives but carries the risk of transmission of infections. Screening donors for transfusion transmissible infection (TTI) is mandatory. Objectives: To study the prevalence of TTI among blood donors at Dongola Specialized hospital, Northern State, Sudan. Materials a...

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Main Author: Mohamed Osman Abdelaziz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Knowledge E 2020-06-01
Series:Sudan Journal of Medical Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.18502/sjms.v15i2.6787
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spelling doaj-5e060cb7963b4e1dbfe0ed19dee2a7172021-08-02T21:50:17ZengKnowledge ESudan Journal of Medical Sciences1858-50512020-06-011510.18502/sjms.v15i2.6787sjms.v15i2.6787Prevalence of Transfusion Transmissible Infection among Healthy Blood Donors at Dongola Specialized Hospital, Sudan, 2010–2015Mohamed Osman Abdelaziz0Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, University of DongolaBackground: Blood transfusion saves lives but carries the risk of transmission of infections. Screening donors for transfusion transmissible infection (TTI) is mandatory. Objectives: To study the prevalence of TTI among blood donors at Dongola Specialized hospital, Northern State, Sudan. Materials and Methods: Retrospective study performed on blood donors at the blood bank of Dongola Specialized Hospital during the period 2010–2015. Demographic data and results of screening tests for all donors in the study period were included. Data were analyzed using SPSS and results were presented in percentages. Results: The total number of donors were 6,489, of which 6,433 (99.1%) were included in the study. All donors were males and family donors. Mean age (SD) was 27.9 (6.516) years. hepatitis B virus was detected in 85 (1.3%), syphilis in 68 (1.1%), hepatitis C virus in 45 (0.7%), and human immunodeficiency virus in 3 (0.05%) donors. Coinfections of hepatitis B with syphilis and hepatitis B with hepatitis C were found in 0.05% and 0.03% of the donors, respectively. Conclusion: The prevalence of TTI is low compared to national and international figures. These findings may reflect low prevalence rates of the studied infections in the community.https://doi.org/10.18502/sjms.v15i2.6787blood donors, northern state, sudan, transfusion transmissible infection
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mohamed Osman Abdelaziz
spellingShingle Mohamed Osman Abdelaziz
Prevalence of Transfusion Transmissible Infection among Healthy Blood Donors at Dongola Specialized Hospital, Sudan, 2010–2015
Sudan Journal of Medical Sciences
blood donors, northern state, sudan, transfusion transmissible infection
author_facet Mohamed Osman Abdelaziz
author_sort Mohamed Osman Abdelaziz
title Prevalence of Transfusion Transmissible Infection among Healthy Blood Donors at Dongola Specialized Hospital, Sudan, 2010–2015
title_short Prevalence of Transfusion Transmissible Infection among Healthy Blood Donors at Dongola Specialized Hospital, Sudan, 2010–2015
title_full Prevalence of Transfusion Transmissible Infection among Healthy Blood Donors at Dongola Specialized Hospital, Sudan, 2010–2015
title_fullStr Prevalence of Transfusion Transmissible Infection among Healthy Blood Donors at Dongola Specialized Hospital, Sudan, 2010–2015
title_full_unstemmed Prevalence of Transfusion Transmissible Infection among Healthy Blood Donors at Dongola Specialized Hospital, Sudan, 2010–2015
title_sort prevalence of transfusion transmissible infection among healthy blood donors at dongola specialized hospital, sudan, 2010–2015
publisher Knowledge E
series Sudan Journal of Medical Sciences
issn 1858-5051
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Background: Blood transfusion saves lives but carries the risk of transmission of infections. Screening donors for transfusion transmissible infection (TTI) is mandatory. Objectives: To study the prevalence of TTI among blood donors at Dongola Specialized hospital, Northern State, Sudan. Materials and Methods: Retrospective study performed on blood donors at the blood bank of Dongola Specialized Hospital during the period 2010–2015. Demographic data and results of screening tests for all donors in the study period were included. Data were analyzed using SPSS and results were presented in percentages. Results: The total number of donors were 6,489, of which 6,433 (99.1%) were included in the study. All donors were males and family donors. Mean age (SD) was 27.9 (6.516) years. hepatitis B virus was detected in 85 (1.3%), syphilis in 68 (1.1%), hepatitis C virus in 45 (0.7%), and human immunodeficiency virus in 3 (0.05%) donors. Coinfections of hepatitis B with syphilis and hepatitis B with hepatitis C were found in 0.05% and 0.03% of the donors, respectively. Conclusion: The prevalence of TTI is low compared to national and international figures. These findings may reflect low prevalence rates of the studied infections in the community.
topic blood donors, northern state, sudan, transfusion transmissible infection
url https://doi.org/10.18502/sjms.v15i2.6787
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