非洲的雅司病:过去、现在和未来。

IF 2.9 Q2 MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL
Ezekiel K Vicar, Shirley V Simpson, Gloria I Mensah, Kennedy K Addo, Eric S Donkor
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:雅司病是一种被忽视的传染性热带病,影响生活在非洲、东南亚和太平洋岛屿潮湿热带地区贫穷、农村和低收入社区的许多儿童和青少年的皮肤。雅司病目前在至少15个国家流行,但缺乏足够的监测数据。根据世卫组织努力改善早期发现、诊断和适当管理以最终根除雅司病的努力,本文回顾了有关非洲雅司病的现有文献,以强调流行病学模式、遗传变异、诊断方式、治疗和控制策略,以及根除雅司病的挑战和前景。方法:检索PubMed和Scopus数据库,筛选符合综述目标的已发表数据。结果:PubMed和Scopus共检索到188篇同行评议文章,其中30篇符合条件。这些研究涵盖了11个非洲国家,报告的流行率从0.50%到43.0%不等。结论:如果各国充分利用已被证明有效的简单、廉价和耐受性良好的口服治疗、经过验证的即时诊断检测和新的分子检测,根除该病的前景广阔。各国应着手开展综合疾病控制工作,以提高贫困社区中这种非传染性疾病患者的可持续性并改善他们的生活质量。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Yaws in Africa: Past, Present and Future.

Background: Yaws is an infectious, neglected tropical disease that affects the skin of many children and adolescents who live in poor, rural, low-income communities in humid, tropical areas of Africa, Southeast Asia, and the Pacific Islands. Yaws is currently endemic in at least 15 countries, but adequate surveillance data are lacking. In line with the WHO's effort to improve early detection, diagnosis, and proper management leading to the eventual eradication of yaws, this article reviews the existing literature on yaws in Africa to highlight the epidemiological pattern, genetic variability, diagnosis modalities, treatment, and control strategies, the challenges and prospects for yaws eradication. Methods: We searched PubMed and Scopus databases to identify published data in line with the review objectives. Results: One hundred and eighty-eight peer-reviewed articles were identified by PubMed and Scopus, out of which thirty were eligible. The studies covered 11 African countries, with the reported prevalence ranging from 0.50% to 43.0%. Conclusions: There is a great prospect for eradication if countries capitalize on the availability of simple, inexpensive, and well-tolerated oral treatment that has proven effective, validated point-of-care diagnostic tests and new molecular tests. Countries should embark on integrated disease control efforts to increase sustainability and improve the quality of life for people living with this NTD in poor communities.

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