裂谷热流行的时空变化:肯尼亚牛和野生动物流行后血清调查。

Q1 Environmental Science
Infection Ecology and Epidemiology Pub Date : 2015-12-15 eCollection Date: 2015-01-01 DOI:10.3402/iee.v5.30106
Olivia Wesula Lwande, George Omondi Paul, Patrick I Chiyo, Eliud Ng'ang'a, Viola Otieno, Vincent Obanda, Magnus Evander
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:裂谷热(RVF)是一种致命的由节肢动物传播的人畜共患疾病。自 20 世纪 30 年代在肯尼亚发现裂谷热以来,非洲和沙特阿拉伯的一些地方多次发生与厄尔尼诺现象同时发生的流行病,造成大量牲畜和人类死亡。由于 RVF 对国际牲畜贸易的负面影响及其在全球传播的潜力,RVF 引起了全世界的极大关注。后者是由于全球变暖导致极端气候现象日益增多,以及全球贸易和国际旅行的增加。目前尚不清楚 RVF 如何在流行病和流行病之间保持和维持,但有人推测,野生动物水库和病媒的跨卵巢传播可能很重要。有几项研究对野生动物和牲畜在短时间内(通常不到一年)在一个国家内孤立或有限地理位置上的作用进行了研究。在这项研究中,我们考察了肯尼亚多个地点的牛和几种野生动物在长达 7 年的疫情间歇期的抗 RVF 抗体血清流行情况:采用竞争性酶联免疫吸附法对肯尼亚不同地点不同野生动物物种的 297 份血清样本进行了 RVF 免疫球蛋白 G (IgG) 抗体的血清学调查。样本收集时间为 2008 年至 2015 年。2014年还从奥尔佩杰塔保护区的177头牛身上采集了血清;其中113头牛与野生动物有密切接触,另外64头牛用电网与水牛和大型动物隔离:结果:在研究期间,野生动物的 RVF 病毒(RVFV)抗体血清阳性率为 11.6%。可能与野生动物和大型动物接触的牛的 RVFV 抗体均为阴性。大象、犀牛和水牛的血清流行率相对较高,但斑马、狒狒、绒猴和角马没有抗体:结论:保护区中的各种物种都会受到 RVFV 的感染。水牛中的 RVFV 暴露可能表明病毒分布在肯尼亚已知 RVFV 病灶以外的广大地区。这一发现要求对特定野生动物物种和地点的 RVFV 流行病学进行深入研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Spatio-temporal variation in prevalence of Rift Valley fever: a post-epidemic serum survey in cattle and wildlife in Kenya.

Background: Rift Valley fever (RVF) is a fatal arthropod-borne zoonotic disease of livestock and humans. Since the identification of RVF in Kenya in the 1930s, repeated epizootics and epidemics coinciding with El Niño events have occurred in several locations in Africa and Saudi Arabia, causing mass deaths of livestock and humans. RVF is of great interest worldwide because of its negative effect on international livestock trade and its potential to spread globally. The latter is due to the increasing incidence of extreme climatic phenomena caused by global warming, as well as to the increase in global trade and international travel. How RVF is maintained and sustained between epidemics and epizootics is not clearly understood, but it has been speculated that wildlife reservoirs and trans-ovarian transmission in the vector may be important. Several studies have examined the role of wildlife and livestock in isolation or in a limited geographical location within the one country over a short time (usually less than a year). In this study, we examined the seroprevalence of anti-RVF antibodies in cattle and several wildlife species from several locations in Kenya over an inter-epidemic period spanning up to 7 years.

Methods: A serological survey of immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibodies to RVF using competitive ELISA was undertaken on 297 serum samples from different wildlife species at various locations in Kenya. The samples were collected between 2008 and 2015. Serum was also collected in 2014 from 177 cattle from Ol Pejeta Conservancy; 113 of the cattle were in close contact with wildlife and the other 64 were kept separate from buffalo and large game by an electric fence.

Results: The seroprevalence of RVF virus (RVFV) antibody was 11.6% in wildlife species during the study period. Cattle that could come in contact with wildlife and large game were all negative for RVFV. The seroprevalence was relatively high in elephants, rhinoceros, and buffalo, but there were no antibodies in zebras, baboons, vervet monkeys, or wildebeest.

Conclusions: Diverse species in conservation areas are exposed to RVFV. RVFV exposure in buffalo may indicate distribution of the virus over wide geographical areas beyond known RVFV foci in Kenya. This finding calls for thorough studies on the epizootology of RVFV in specific wildlife species and locations.

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来源期刊
Infection Ecology and Epidemiology
Infection Ecology and Epidemiology Environmental Science-Environmental Science (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
8.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
4
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: Infection Ecology & Epidemiology aims to stimulate inter-disciplinary collaborations dealing with a range of subjects, from the plethora of zoonotic infections in humans, over diseases with implication in wildlife ecology, to advanced virology and bacteriology. The journal specifically welcomes papers from studies where researchers from multiple medical and ecological disciplines are collaborating so as to increase our knowledge of the emergence, spread and effect of new and re-emerged infectious diseases in humans, domestic animals and wildlife. Main areas of interest include, but are not limited to: 1.Zoonotic microbioorganisms 2.Vector borne infections 3.Gastrointestinal pathogens 4.Antimicrobial resistance 5.Zoonotic microbioorganisms in changing environment
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