Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4560182 | Food Control | 2009 | 4 Pages |
A total of 46 wastewater samples (untreated: 24 and treated: 22), 35 soil samples and 172 vegetable samples were collected from the wastewater-irrigated area of Titagarh to assess its contamination level with intestinal helminth. 83.3% of raw wastewater, 68.2% of treated wastewater, 68.6% of soil and 44.2% of vegetables in the study area were found to be positive for helminth ova. Vegetables grown in this area were found positive for Ascaris lumbricoides (36%), Trichuris trichiura (1.7%) and hookworms (6.4%). A. lumbricoides was the most predominant species observed in all the samples. Of all the vegetables examined, Pudina was most commonly contaminated followed by Lettuce, Spinach, Coriander, Celery and Parsley. High percentage of viable-stage intestinal helminth egg positive vegetable samples grown in the wastewater-irrigated study area may pose serious public health hazards.