Possible zoonotic implications of the discovery of the advanced third stage larva of Gnathostoma turgidum (Spirurida: Gnathostomatidae) in a Mexican fish species
Author:
Mosqueda-Cabrera M. Á.1, Desentis-Pérez D. L.1, Padilla-Bejarano T. A.1, García-Prieto L.2
Affiliation:
1. 1 Departamento El Hombre y su Ambiente, División de Ciencias Biológicas y de la Salud , Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana Unidad Xochimilco , Calzada del Hueso 1100, Col. Villa Quietud , Coyoacán Ciudad de México , México 2. 2 Colección Nacional de Helmintos , Instituto de Biología, UNAM , Ciudad de México , Mexico
Abstract
Summary
Gnathostomiasis in humans is acquired by consumption of any infected second intermediate host or paratenic host. This includes amphibians, snakes and poultry as well as fish. In this work we report for the first time in Mexico the presence of an AdvL3 of Gnathostoma turgidum in the musculature of a wild fish (Gobiomorus dormitor, which also acts as intermediate host for the larvae of G. binucleatum and G. lamothei), from the Papaloapan River, Veracruz; previously, larvae of G. turgidum had only been recorded in amphibians in Mexico and in wild swamp eels from Tampa, Florida, USA. The larva found is extremely small (approximately 1,500 by 140 microns in length and width, respectively), and was obtained by artificial digestion with pepsin after examining the musculature against the light between two glass plates, a method by which it went unnoticed. Our finding of an AdvL3 in this fish, together with a previous molecular phylogenetic analysis revealing that the five species involved in human infections do not nest in the same clade, suggest that all species in the genus are potentially zoonotic. In this context, we strongly recommend the identification of larvae extracted from human patients at specific level, in order to know the role played by the 3 species distributed in Mexico in human cases of gnathostomiasis.
Publisher
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Parasitology
Reference22 articles.
1. Almeyda-Artigas, R.J. (1991): Hallazgo de Gnathostoma binucleatum n. sp. (Nematoda: Spirurida) en felinos silvestres y el papel de peces dulceacuícolas y oligohalinos como vectores de la gnatostomiasis humana en la cuenca baja del Río Papaloapan, Oaxaca-Veracruz, México [Finding of Gnathostoma binucleatum n. sp. (Nematoda: Spirurida) in wild cats and the role of freshwater and oligohaline fish as vectors of human gnathostomiasis in the lower basin of the Papaloapan River, Oaxaca-Veracruz, Mexico]. An Inst Cienc del Mar y Limnol Univ Nac Autón Méx, 18(2): 137 – 155 (In Spanish) 2. Almeyda-Artigas, R.J., Bargues, M.D., Mas-Coma, S. (2000): ITS-2 rDNA sequencing of Gnathostoma species (Nematoda) and elucidation of the species causing human gnathostomiasis in the Americas. J Parasitol, 86(3): 537 – 544. DOI: 10.1645/0022-3395(2000)086[0537:IRSOGS]2.0.CO;2 3. Álvarez-Guerrero, C., Alba-Hurtado, F. (2007): Estuarine fish and turtles as intermediate and paratenic hosts of Gnathostoma binucleatum in Nayarit, Mexico. Parasitol Res, 102(1): 117 – 122. DOI 10.1007/s00436-007-0738-x 4. Bapat, A., Nickel, B., Bray, T.J.P., Abbasi, M., Stone, N.R. (2022): Case Report: Gnathostomiasis Acquired in Costa Rica in a Returning Traveler to the United Kingdom. Am J Trop Med Hyg, 106(4): 1263 – 1264. DOI: 10.4269/ajtmh.21-1215 5. Bertoni-Ruiz, F. (2006): Análisis Filogenético del género Gnathostoma Owen, 1836 (Nematoda: Gnathostomtidae) [ Phylogenetic analysis of the genus Gnathostoma Owen, 1836 (Nematoda: Gnathostomtidae)]. MSc thesis, Mexico, Mexico City: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (In Spanish)
|
|