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1.
Acta Parasitol ; 60(3): 536-43, 2015 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26204194

ABSTRACT

Fascioliasis has recently been included in the WHO list of Neglected Zoonotic Diseases. Besides being a major veterinary health problem, fascioliasis has large underdeveloping effects on the human communities affected. Though scarcely considered in fascioliasis epidemiology, it is well recognized that both native and introduced wildlife species may play a significant role as reservoirs of the disease. The objectives are to study the morphological characteristics of Fasciola hepatica adults and eggs in a population of Lepus europaeus, to assess liver fluke prevalence, and to analyze the potential reservoir role of the European brown hare in northern Patagonia, Argentina, where fascioliasis is endemic. Measures of F. hepatica found in L. europaeus from northern Patagonia demonstrate that the liver fluke is able to fully develop in wild hares and to shed normal eggs through their faeces. Egg shedding to the environment is close to the lower limit obtained for pigs, a domestic animal whose epidemiological importance in endemic areas has already been highlighted. The former, combined with the high prevalence found (14.28%), suggest an even more important role in the transmission cycle than previously considered. The results obtained do not only remark the extraordinary plasticity and adaptability of this trematode species to different host species, but also highlight the role of the European brown hare, and other NIS, as reservoirs capable for parasite spillback to domestic and native cycle, representing a potentially important, but hitherto neglected, cause of disease emergence.


Subject(s)
Fasciola hepatica/isolation & purification , Fascioliasis/pathology , Fascioliasis/veterinary , Hares/parasitology , Animals , Argentina/epidemiology , Fasciola hepatica/anatomy & histology , Fascioliasis/epidemiology , Microscopy , Prevalence , Risk Assessment
2.
Vet Parasitol ; 166(1-2): 73-9, 2009 Dec 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19729246

ABSTRACT

Fascioliasis is widespread in livestock in Argentina. Among activities included in a long-term initiative to ascertain which are the fascioliasis areas of most concern, studies were performed in a recreational farm, including liver fluke infection in different domestic animal species, classification of the lymnaeid vector and verification of natural transmission of fascioliasis by identification of the intramolluscan trematode larval stages found in naturally infected snails. The high prevalences in the domestic animals appeared related to only one lymnaeid species present. Lymnaeid and trematode classification was verified by means of nuclear ribosomal DNA and mitochondrial DNA marker sequencing. Complete sequences of 18S rRNA gene and rDNA ITS-2 and ITS-1, and a fragment of the mtDNA cox1 gene demonstrate that the Argentinian lymnaeid belongs to the species Lymnaea neotropica. Redial larval stages found in a L. neotropica specimen were ascribed to Fasciola hepatica after analysis of the complete ITS-1 sequence. The finding of L. neotropica is the first of this lymnaeid species not only in Argentina but also in Southern Cone countries. The total absence of nucleotide differences between the sequences of specimens from Argentina and the specimens from the Peruvian type locality at the levels of rDNA 18S, ITS-2 and ITS-1, and the only one mutation at the mtDNA cox1 gene suggest a very recent spread. The ecological characteristics of this lymnaeid, living in small, superficial water collections frequented by livestock, suggest that it may be carried from one place to another by remaining in dried mud stuck to the feet of transported animals. The presence of L. neotropica adds pronounced complexity to the transmission and epidemiology of fascioliasis in Argentina, due to the great difficulties in distinguishing, by traditional malacological methods, between the three similar lymnaeid species of the controversial Galba/Fossaria group present in this country: L. viatrix, Galba truncatula and L. neotropica. It also poses a problem with regard to the use, for lymnaeid vector species discrimination, of several molecular techniques which do not show sufficient accuracy, as those relying on the 18S rRNA gene or parts of it, because both L. neotropica and L. viatrix present identical 18S sequence.


Subject(s)
Fasciola/physiology , Fascioliasis/veterinary , Lymnaea/parasitology , Animals , Argentina , Cattle , DNA, Mitochondrial/analysis , DNA, Ribosomal/analysis , DNA, Ribosomal Spacer/genetics , Electron Transport Complex IV/genetics , Fasciola/genetics , Fascioliasis/transmission , Larva , Lymnaea/anatomy & histology , Lymnaea/genetics , RNA, Ribosomal, 18S/genetics , Sequence Analysis, DNA
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