Author:
BOES J.,MEDLEY G. F.,ERIKSEN L.,ROEPSTORFF A.,NANSEN P.
Abstract
This paper describes the distribution of Ascaris suum
in experimentally and naturally infected pigs, and offers a comparison
with A. lumbricoides infections in humans. In the first study,
worms were recovered post-mortem from a group of 38 pigs
that had been trickle inoculated with 10000 infective A. suum
eggs twice weekly for 12 weeks. In the second study, worms
were collected from a group of 49 pigs that had been kept on a pasture
contaminated with infective A. suum eggs for
10 weeks, after which they received treatment with an anthelmintic; they
then were turned out on the same pasture for a
second 10-week period before slaughter. The worm burdens of the naturally
infected pigs were recorded both at treatment
and post-mortem. Mean worm counts were similar at all occasions but the
prevalence of infection was higher in the trickle
infected and naturally reinfected pigs. Furthermore, the prevalence in
naturally infected pigs increased significantly over
the study period. Worm burden distributions in all groups were heavily
overdispersed, but the distribution patterns
differed significantly between groups: lower exposure (initial natural
infection) gave a low prevalence and an almost
uniform distribution of worm burdens among infected hosts. Continued or
higher exposure (trickle and natural reinfection)
resulted in increased prevalence and a reduction in the proportion of hosts
with increasing worm load. A positive
correlation was found between initial and reinfection worm burdens in the
naturally infected pig population, suggesting
that individual pigs are predisposed to a high or low intensity of infection.
The prevalence and intensity as well as the
distribution observed for A. suum infection in pigs were comparable
to those reported for A. lumbricoides in endemic areas,
and there is evidence for predisposition to A. suum in pigs, with
an estimated correlation coefficient similar to that found
in humans. It is concluded that A. suum infections in pigs are
a suitable model to study the population dynamics of
A. lumbricoides in human populations.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Animal Science and Zoology,Parasitology
Cited by
57 articles.
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