population treatments, as shown in Figure 1 (72).
Of interest are:
the drop
broad-spectrum
during
Atoll
Rongelap
on
counts
in mean absolute eosinophil

anthelminthic treatment with mebendazole, followed by resurgence during the
post-treatment period; and the relatively stable eosinophilia on Utirik, de-

spite ascaricidal treatment, which appears to correlate with temporal observa-

tions on helminth prevalence on that atoll.

<
=
a

<-

]

]

500

|

rT

1

o= PYRANTEL PAMOATE (UTIRIK)
* =MEBENDAZOLE (RONGELAP)

I

4

Be

Ge
w 2

Reo

400

34
aS
w
a—
so)
I
la}

:=

Fig. 1.

D.

1

3

1

OF

1

3

pa

#67 9
MONTHS

a2

9

Peripheral eosinophilia in populations treated
for intestinal parasites.

Conclusions

The results of the parasitic surveys undertaken during suppressive efforts on Rongelap Atoll from 1977 to 1979 and on Utirik Atoll from 1978 to
1979 have indicated the presence of those intestinal helminths expected in

non-urban populations living in the tropical climate of the mid-Pacific, and,
though with Less complete documentation, also of the expected intestinal

protozoa.
The introduction of Ascaris lumbricoides onto Rongelap Atoll following
the 1958 survey is well documented in this study. However, the extent of its

success in becoming established, as well as its presence to the same extent on

Utirik Atoll, suggest that its absence during the 1958 survey may have been
partly anomalous, and may have resulted from the Rongelapese population's preceding three-year absence from their island. Certainly, the people are now
very aware of the presence of roundworm.
The extent to which diarrheal disease may be attributed to endemic intestinal parasites is unclear, although a

partial cause-and-effect relationship is quite probable with regard to the

protozoal pathogens detected.
On the other hand, the results of a recent report on shigellosis in the Marshall Islands (73) would suggest that bacterial
species may also be involved in diarrhea on the outer atolls; considerable con-

tact now occurs (albeit at infrequent intervals) between Rongelap, Utirik,
Ebeye, and Majuro, on the latter two of which an outbreak of Shigella flexneri
diarrheal illness was well documented.

- 41 -

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