Abstract
Dirofilariasis is one of the oldest known zoonotic infections of humans mainly caused by the filarial parasites of the species Dirofilaria immitis and Dirofilaria repens, which primarily infect dogs. A five-year survey (2017 to 2021) was conducted among the dog population to assess the molecular prevalence of Dirofilaria spp. in southeast France. Morphological and genetic analysis were performed on filaroids from dogs and one infected woman from the studied area. A total of 12 (13%) dogs scored molecularly positive for Dirofilaria spp. of which nine carried blood microfilariae. Ocular dirofilariasis was detected in a 79-year-old woman with no travel history. Both electron microscopy and molecular sequencing identified the worm in the human case as D. repens. Molecularly, D. repens isolates were identical in the human and dog cases, representing the only genotype reported so far in France. Despite the distribution of this genotype through all Europe, it was grouped separately with the other two European genotypes and with Asian ones. As in almost all previous human cases in France, D. repens parasites were mainly recovered from the ocular region of patients and were geographically concentrated in the southeastern regions. Data demonstrate the sympatric occurrence of D. immitis and D. repens with high risk of infection to human and dog populations in these investigated geographical areas, thereby underlining the urgent need to implement preventive chemoprophylactic strategies and vector control to reduce the risk of these filaroids in dog and human populations.
Subject
Virology,Microbiology (medical),Microbiology
Reference61 articles.
1. Su di un nematode dell’occhio umano;Addario;Ann. Ottalmolog.,1885
2. Dirofilariosi umana sottocongiuntivale: Su di un probabile caso osservato in Francia da Amato Lusitano nel XVI secolo;Pampiglione;Parassitologia,1995
3. De Animalibus Insectis Libri Septem cum Singulorum Iconibus ad Viuum Expressis;Aldrovandi,1698
4. Human and Animal Dirofilariasis: the Emergence of a Zoonotic Mosaic
5. Vector-borne helminths of dogs and humans in Europe
Cited by
11 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献