从野生动物到人类:旋毛虫物种和基因型在全球野生动物中的分布以及与野生动物相关的人类旋毛虫病

IF 2 3区 医学 Q3 ECOLOGY
Cody J. Malone , Antti Oksanen , Samson Mukaratirwa , Rajnish Sharma , Emily Jenkins
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引用次数: 0

摘要

旋毛虫属的人畜共患线虫是一种食源性寄生虫,在全球范围内分布于野生食肉动物和杂食动物体内,并外溢和回流到家畜和人类体内,从而对贸易和健康造成影响。从历史上看,大多数人类病例都与感染了螺旋体旋毛虫的家猪有关,但在目前许多国家的高生物安全猪肉生产中,野生动物已成为人类旋毛虫病的更重要来源。本综述旨在更新野生动物中报告的旋毛虫种类和基因型的全球分布情况,以及报告的因食用野生动物而导致的人类疫情。利用几个在线数据库和 "滚雪球 "式的参考文献,1991 年 1 月至 2023 年 12 月间发表的数百份关于野生动物中旋毛虫属的报告为按大洲分类的 13 种公认的旋毛虫/基因型提供了重要的宿主和地理分布更新。欧洲和北美洲的监测力度最大,而非洲、亚洲、中美洲和南美洲的监测力度有限,在某些情况下,人类病例成为该地区传播的哨兵。报告描述了数十起人类疫情,野猪(Sus scrofa)是全球人类疫情中最常见的野生动物物种。熊是北美野生动物旅游的重要传染源,进口熊肉也与多国疫情有关。研究的最大局限是缺乏对野生动物监测研究和人类疫情爆发中幼虫的分子鉴定,尤其是在研究不足的地区。我们强调有必要加强分子流行病学方法来应对这种重要的食源性寄生虫疫情,并强调有必要采用 "统一健康 "方法来管理旋毛虫属,因为这种寄生虫会在陆地和海洋野生动物(包括候鸟)、猪、马和人之间传播,而且往往跨越巨大的地理范围和边界。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

From wildlife to humans: The global distribution of Trichinella species and genotypes in wildlife and wildlife-associated human trichinellosis

From wildlife to humans: The global distribution of Trichinella species and genotypes in wildlife and wildlife-associated human trichinellosis

Zoonotic nematodes of the genus Trichinella are foodborne parasites that have a global distribution in wild carnivores and omnivores, with spillover and spillback into domestic livestock and people, with concomitant trade and health consequences. Historically, most human cases were linked to domestic pigs infected with Trichinella spiralis, but under current high biosecurity swine production in many countries, wildlife have become a more important source of human trichinellosis. The aim of this review is to update the global distribution of Trichinella species and genotypes reported in wildlife, as well as reported human outbreaks from the consumption of wildlife. Using several online databases and by “snowballing” references, hundreds of reports of Trichinella spp. in wildlife published between January 1991 and December 2023 provide an important update to the host and geographic range for each of the recognized 13 species/genotypes, grouped by continent. Surveillance effort was highest in Europe and North America, while Africa, Asia, Central and South America have had limited surveillance, in some instances with human cases serving as sentinels of transmission in a region. Dozens of human outbreaks are described, with wild boars (Sus scrofa) being the most frequently implicated wildlife species in human outbreaks globally. Bears are an important source of infection in North America, for wildlife tourism, and importation of bear meat has also been implicated in multicountry outbreaks. The largest study limitation was the dearth of molecular identification of larvae in both wildlife surveillance studies and human outbreaks, particulary in under-studied regions. We highlight the need for enhanced molecular epidemiological approaches to outbreaks of this important foodborne parasite, and emphasize the need for a One Health approach to manage Trichinella spp. which transmit among terrestrial and marine wildlife (including migratory birds), pigs, horses, and people, often across large geographic scales and borders.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
5.60%
发文量
113
审稿时长
45 days
期刊介绍: The International Journal for Parasitology: Parasites and Wildlife (IJP-PAW) publishes the results of original research on parasites of all wildlife, invertebrate and vertebrate. This includes free-ranging, wild populations, as well as captive wildlife, semi-domesticated species (e.g. reindeer) and farmed populations of recently domesticated or wild-captured species (e.g. cultured fishes). Articles on all aspects of wildlife parasitology are welcomed including taxonomy, biodiversity and distribution, ecology and epidemiology, population biology and host-parasite relationships. The impact of parasites on the health and conservation of wildlife is seen as an important area covered by the journal especially the potential role of environmental factors, for example climate. Also important to the journal is ''one health'' and the nature of interactions between wildlife, people and domestic animals, including disease emergence and zoonoses.
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