Shi-Jie Fan , Ming Pan , Chen-Yang Xia , Pin Yang , Si-Yang Huang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Toxoplasmosis is a globally prevalent zoonotic disease with significant public health impact, yet effective prevention and control measures remain lacking. This study analyzed 10,737 publications from 2003 to 2022 in the Web of Science and Scopus databases using bibliometric methods. Key metrics, including annual publication trends, journals, core authors, contributing countries, citations, and keywords, were examined. The findings indicate that publication output in toxoplasmosis research has remained stable, with core journals predominantly in the parasitology field. The United States leads in research capacity and contributions, followed by Brazil, Germany, the United Kingdom, and France, while China shows promising potential. Epidemiological research has been a longstanding hotspot in this field, encompassing areas such as diagnosis, prevention, treatment, virulence analysis, and genotyping. The field is expanding towards mechanistic research and translational applications, shifting its emphasis from basic science to practical public health applications and disease prevention strategies. Current research frontiers and emerging trends focus on host-pathogen interactions, innovative prevention and control methods, and the global public health implications of toxoplasmosis. This study provides a comprehensive overview of the past two decades of progress in toxoplasmosis research, offering valuable insights for future studies and academic development.
期刊介绍:
The journal Veterinary Parasitology has an open access mirror journal,Veterinary Parasitology: X, sharing the same aims and scope, editorial team, submission system and rigorous peer review.
This journal is concerned with those aspects of helminthology, protozoology and entomology which are of interest to animal health investigators, veterinary practitioners and others with a special interest in parasitology. Papers of the highest quality dealing with all aspects of disease prevention, pathology, treatment, epidemiology, and control of parasites in all domesticated animals, fall within the scope of the journal. Papers of geographically limited (local) interest which are not of interest to an international audience will not be accepted. Authors who submit papers based on local data will need to indicate why their paper is relevant to a broader readership.
Parasitological studies on laboratory animals fall within the scope of the journal only if they provide a reasonably close model of a disease of domestic animals. Additionally the journal will consider papers relating to wildlife species where they may act as disease reservoirs to domestic animals, or as a zoonotic reservoir. Case studies considered to be unique or of specific interest to the journal, will also be considered on occasions at the Editors'' discretion. Papers dealing exclusively with the taxonomy of parasites do not fall within the scope of the journal.