Saturday, 7 January 2012

Food-borne Trematodiasis

Food-borne Trematodiasis

Trematodes or flukes are flatworms belonging to the Phylum Platyheminthes. They are small parasitic flatworms that use vertebrates as their definitive host and mollusc as their intermediate host.

Trematode infections such as schistosomiasis have emerged as important tropical infections. An estimated 200 million people in the tropical belts of the world may have schistosomal infection. This makes Schistosoma infection the second most prevalent tropical infectious disease in areas such as sub-Saharan Africa after malaria.

Depending on the habitat in the infected host, flukes can be classified as blood flukes, liver flukes, lung flukes or intestinal flukes.
 
Blood flukes include Schistosoma haematobium, Schistosoma mansoni, Schistosoma japonicum, Schistosoma mekongi, and Schistosoma intercalatum.
Liver flukes include Fasciola hepatica, Fasciola gigantica, C sinensis, Opisthorchis felineus, O viverrini, Dicrocoelium dendriticum, and Dicrocoelium hospes.
Pancreatic flukes include Eurytrema pacreaticum, Eurytrema coelomaticum, and Eurytrema ovis.
Lung flukes include Paragonimus westermani, Paragonimus mexicana, and Paragonimus skrjabini.
Intestinal flukes include F buski, M yokogawai, Echinostoma ilocanum, Watsonius watsoni, H heterophyes, and Gastrodiscoides hominis.

In The Lancet Infectious Disease, Thomas Fürst and colleagues conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis to determine the global burden of human food-borne trematodiasis. Food-borne trematodiasis is a cluster/group of disease transmitted by the consumption of undercooked aquatic food contaminated with the larval stage of the fluke (i.e the metacercariae). The species of significant importance that affect human health are Clonorchiasis (infection with Clonorchis sinensis), Opisthorchiasis (infection with Opisthorchis viverrini or O.felineus) and Fasciolasis (infection with Fasciola hepatica or F. gigantic), which affect the liver and Paragonimiasis (infection with Paragonimus spp), which affect the lungs.

Food-borne trematodes have a complex life cycle which entails definitive hosts (humans and animal species that act as reservoirs of infection), a first intermediate host (a freshwater snail) and a second intermediate host (a fish or a crustacean) in which the infective metacercariae develop. Fasciola spp. is however an exception as the metacercariae are found attached to water plants or float freely in fresh water.

  Life Cycle of Five Different Food-borne Trematodes.

Fürst and colleagues used quantitative and qualitative data on prevalence, incidence, infection intensity, remission, mortality and duration to develop three simplified disease model and estimated the global burden of food-borne trematodiasis.

From their investigation they estimated that in 2005, 56.2 million people were infected with food-borne trematodes, 7.9 million people had severe sequelae and 7158 people died, while the global burden of the disease was 665 352 DALYs – 351 026 years lived with disability and 314 326 years of life lost. They also reported more men than women were infected by Clonorchis sinensis, Opisthorchis spp, all intestinal flukes and Paragonimus spp, whereas more women than men were infected by Fasciola spp.
 
These are findings are quite interesting as they show food-borne trematode infections as an emerging neglected disease. These infections occur in parts of the world where poverty persists, especially in East Asia, Southeast Asia and South America. However within a country, infection is usually focal and limited to specific regions or geographical areas. Many factors contribute to these high prevalence rate and they include: lack of education, malnutrition, poor sanitation, inability to recognise asymptomatic infections and neglect by local and international health authorities.

In their study, Fürst and colleagues highlighted several limitations one of which was high quality data. As such the global burden of food-borne trematodiasis might be much higher than reported by Fürst and colleagues. Therefore as Fürst and colleagues said, “the ultimate goal for future assessments of the burden of food-borne trematodiasis is to minimise the gap between actual and reported prevalence and between the complex natural histories of the diseases and the simplified models as applied in our calculations” .

Note:
Opisthorchis viverrini and Clonorchis sinensis have been designated carcinogens by the International Agency for Research Cancer.

Source:
Thomas Fürst, Jennifer Keiser und Jürg Utzinger.
Global burden of human food-borne trematodiasis: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
Lancet Infectious Diseases, Published online 21 November 2011,

WHO: Initiative to estimate the Global Burden of Food-borne Diseases, 2011 http://www.who.int/foodsafety/foodborne_disease/ferg/en/index.html. (Accessed Sept 30, 2011)

7 comments:

  1. Dear Dr. Ifeoma, we would like to ask permission to reuse and adapt the figure (Life cycle of foodborne trematodes) in this vlog for a paper of ours which will be published in an open access journal. We will surely cite this informative vlog of yours. Thank you very much in advance.

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    1. Dear Dr Clyde. Hello and good afternoon. I am honoured that you would want to use the picture on my blog. You have my permission.

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  5. Dr. Ifeoma, I found the way in which you constructed the possibilities of digenetic cycles, with transmission via food, very interesting. I would like your permission to adapt the figure on this blog for a class in a discipline that I teach for the Biological Sciences course.
    Thank you in advance for your attention.
    Solange Brandolini

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    1. Hello Dr. Brandolini. Good evening. I am honoured that you wish to use the picture to teach your class. You have my permission.

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