RESUMO
Effects of temperature on the sporulation of the parasite Cyclospora cayetanensis were studied in 2 food substrates, dairy and basil. Unsporulated Cyclospora oocysts were subjected to freezing and heating conditions for time periods ranging from 15 min to 1 wk. Oocysts were then removed from the food substrates and placed in 2.5% potassium dichromate for 2 wk to allow viable unsporulated oocysts to differentiate and fully sporulate, and to determine the percentage sporulation as an indicator of viability. Sporulation occurred when oocysts resuspended in dairy substrates were stored within 24 hr at -15 C. When oocysts were placed in water or basil, sporulation occurred after incubation for up to 2 days at -20 C, and up to 4 days at 37 C. Few oocysts sporulated when incubated for 1 hr at 50 C. Sporulation was not observed in basil leaves or water at -70 C, 70 C, and 100 C. Sporulation was not affected when incubated at 4 C and 23 C for up to 1 wk, which was the duration of the experiment in both of the tested substrates.
Assuntos
Cyclospora/fisiologia , Laticínios/parasitologia , Parasitologia de Alimentos , Ocimum basilicum/parasitologia , Temperatura , Animais , Ciclosporíase/parasitologia , Humanos , Leite/parasitologia , Oocistos/fisiologia , Esporos de ProtozoáriosRESUMO
Disease outbreaks caused by the coccidian parasite Cyclospora cayetanensis in food have been linked to consumption of raspberries that may have been contaminated through exposure to water mixed with insecticides and fungicides that may have been sprayed onto the berries. Three different fungicides (captan 50% W.P., benomyl 50% W.P., and zineb 75% W.P.) and two different insecticides (malathion 25% W.P. and diazinon 4E 47.5%) were evaluated at five different concentrations and for exposure times of 30 min to 1 week. Sporulation of C. cayetanensis did not decrease with use of any of the pesticides from time periods of 30 min to 24 h at all concentrations. Sporulation percentage was reduced with the fungicide benomyl at 1 week of exposure. The growth of the parasite Cryptosporidium parvum was also evaluated using captan 50% W.P., benomyl 50% W.P., and diazinon 4E 47.5%. Oocyst infectivity was reduced only after 7 days of exposure. These results indicate that these pesticides used at recommended concentration levels do not affect the sporulation of Cyclospora.