Patterns of helminth infections in Rattus rattus and Mus musculus from two Mayan communities in Mexico

2019 ◽  
Vol 94 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.A. Panti-May ◽  
E.E. Palomo-Arjona ◽  
Y.M. Gurubel-González ◽  
R.C. Barrientos-Medina ◽  
M.C. Digiani ◽  
...  

Abstract The black rat Rattus rattus and the house mouse Mus musculus are two commensal rodent species that harbour and shed zoonotic pathogens, including helminths. The aim of this survey was to study the helminth community and the patterns of infections in R. rattus and M. musculus from two Mayan communities in Mexico. Gastrointestinal helminths were isolated from 322 M. musculus and 124 R. rattus, including Gongylonema neoplasticum, Hassalstrongylus aduncus, Hassalstrongylus musculi, Hydatigera taeniaeformis metacestode, Hymenolepis diminuta, Nippostrongylus brasiliensis, Oligacanthorhynchidae gen. sp., Syphacia muris, Syphacia obvelata, Rodentolepis microstoma and Trichuris muris. The overall richness of helminths was seven in R. rattus and six in M. musculus. The results of generalized linear models showed that juvenile rodents had lower probabilities of being infected with G. neoplasticum, H. taeniaeformis and H. musculi than adult rodents. A positive association between the prevalence of S. muris and rat abundance was found. The intensity of infection with S. muris was higher in the rainy season than in the dry season; the opposite result was found for H. musculi infection. Male R. rattus harboured more S. muris specimens. The intensity of infection with T. muris was inversely associated with mouse abundance. The presence of the zoonotic H. diminuta, as well as H. taeniaeformis and R. microstoma in rodent populations indicates that there is risk of transmission, and that their entire life cycle occurs in the study area.

2017 ◽  
Vol 54 (2) ◽  
pp. 170-173 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Cigarroa-Toledo ◽  
Y. De Los Santos-Martinez ◽  
C. V. Zaragoza-Vera ◽  
M. M. Garcia-Rodriguez ◽  
C. M. Baak-Baak ◽  
...  

Summary The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence and species composition of helminths in commensal rodents captured inside private residences in the city of Villahermosa in Tabasco, Mexico. Trapping was performed at each house for three consecutive nights from October to December 2015. Fifty commensal rodents were captured: 23 Rattus norvegicus, 16 Mus musculus and 11 Rattus rattus. Rodents were transported alive to the laboratory and held in cages until they defecated. Feces were analyzed for helminth eggs using the Sheather’s flotation technique. The overall prevalence of helminths in rodents was 60 %: R. norvegicus was more likely to be parasitized (87.0 %) than R. rattus (63.6 %) and M. musculus (18.8 %). Eggs from at least 13 species of helminths were identified: Hymenolepis diminuta, Rodentolepis nana, Moniliformis moniliformis, Heligmosomoides polygyrus, Heterakis spumosa, Mastophorus muris, Nippostrongylus brasiliensis, Strongyloides ratti, Syphacia obvelata, Syphacia muris, Toxocara sp., Trichosomoides crassicauda, and Trichuris muris. This is the first study to report the presence of H. polygyrus, S. ratti and T. crassicauda in commensal rodents in Mexico. In conclusion, our results suggest that helminths commonly infect commensal rodents in Villahermosa and therefore rodents present a health risk to inhabitants in this region.


1997 ◽  
Vol 71 (3) ◽  
pp. 217-220 ◽  
Author(s):  
C.F. Mafiana ◽  
M.B. Osho ◽  
S. Sam-Wobo

AbstractA survey of 612 black rats, Rattus rattus (282 males and 330 females), for infections with helminth parasites was carried out in Abeokuta, in southwest Nigeria. Three hundred and ninety six (64.7%) were infected with one or more of seven species of helminths comprising three cestodes (Hymenolepis diminuta, Taenia taeniaeformis (cyst) and Raillietina sp.) three nematodes (Mastophorus muris, Trichuris muris and Syphacia sp.) and one acanthocephalan (Moniliformis moniliformis). Although the prevalence of infection in males (76.6%) was more than in females (54.5%) (P< 0.01), there was no difference in the mean intensity of infection, MI, (males = 11.6 ± 0.94, females = 11.1 ± 1.56). Among the different weight classes, rats of 100–130g were more infected (89.3%) and had the highest mean intensity (MI = 21.6) than those that weighed <100g (47.1%, MI = 6.4) and >130g (73.9%, MI = 9.3). Moniliformis moniliformis was the most common species encountered (39.2%) and had the highest mean intensity in both sexes ( = 7.4 ± 0.74). Considering the rat-man proximity, this finding has considerable public health implications.


2013 ◽  
Vol 89 (1) ◽  
pp. 42-48 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.A. Panti-May ◽  
S.F. Hernández-Betancourt ◽  
R.I. Rodríguez-Vivas ◽  
M.R. Robles

AbstractThe aim of the present study was to calculate the prevalence and intensity of intestinal helminths in the house mouse (Mus musculus) and the black rat (Rattus rattus) trapped in rural households of Yucatan, Mexico. Sampling was conducted during the rainy season from October to December 2011 and the dry season from January to March 2012. A total of 154 M. musculus and 46 R. rattus were examined, with 84.2% of M. musculus being infected with helminths compared with a significantly lower prevalence of 52.2% in R. rattus (P< 0.01). Adult M. musculus were more likely to be infected with helminths (89%) than subadults (63%) (P< 0.01). Four helminth species were identified: Taenia taeniaeformis larvae, Nippostrongylus brasiliensis, Syphacia muris and Trichuris muris. Nippostrongylusbrasiliensis was present more frequently in M. musculus than in R. rattus (P< 0.01) and in adult mice compared to subadults (P< 0.01). Trichuris muris was present only in adult mice. This is the first report of N. brasiliensis, S. muris and T. muris in Yucatan, Mexico, as well as the first to report the presence of N. brasiliensis in M. musculus from Mexico. The helminth fauna of commensal rodents present in households appears to constitute a low potential health risk to local inhabitants; however, it would be advisable to conduct further studies to better understand the public health risk posed by these rodent intestinal helminths.


2017 ◽  
Vol 40 (2) ◽  
pp. 177-182 ◽  
Author(s):  
Petar T. Iliev ◽  
Georgi Zh. Georgiev ◽  
Zvezdelina T. Kirkova ◽  
Borislava G. Chakarova

AbstractA field study was conducted to disclose the prevalence of different helminth parasites in the black rat, Rattus rattus, in some regions of Stara Zagora district, Bulgaria. Out of 67 examined rats, 53 (79.1%) were found to be positive. Helminths of three classes were detected such as Cestoda: Hymenolepis diminuta (47.8%), Hymenolepis nana (43.3%), Taenia taeniaeformis larvae (7.5%), Taenia polyacantha larvae (1.5%); Secernentea: Syphacia obvelata (4.5%), Aspiculuris tetraptera (3.0%) and Adenophorea: Capillaria hepatica (9.0%), Trichuris muris (3.0%). Of all the investigated rats, 27 (40.3%) were infected by one helminth species and 26 (38.8%) by more than one. Hymenolepis diminuta was a predominant species in cases of single infections (23.9%). The most frequent co-infections were observed by H. nana and H. diminuta (16.4%).


2017 ◽  
Vol 54 (3) ◽  
pp. 231-239 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. A. Panti-May ◽  
E. Palomo-Arjona ◽  
Y. Gurubel-González ◽  
M. A. Torres-Castro ◽  
V. M. Vidal-Martínez ◽  
...  

SummaryThe aim of this paper was to study the occurrence of helminths inMus musculusandRattus rattusfrom urban, suburban and rural settlements in Yucatán, Mexico; and to analyse the host factors (e.g. sex) related to helminths’ distribution. Helminths in a total of 279 rodents were surveyed by visual examination of the liver for metacestodes and faecal examination for helminth eggs using the formalin-ethyl acetate sedimentation technique. The cestodesHydatigera taeniaeformis(metacestodes detected in the liver) andHymenolepis diminuta,and the nematodesAspiculurissp.,Nippostrongylus brasiliensis,Syphacia muris,Syphacia obvelata, andTrichuris muriswere identified. InM. musculus, the prevalence of infection withT. murisandH. taeniaeformiswas higher in the rural village compared to those in the suburban neighbourhood. ForR. rattus, a higher prevalence of infection withH. diminutawas found in the urban site compared to that in the suburban site. This study reports the occurrence ofH. diminutaamong rodents living in close proximity to humans, representing a potential public health risk. In addition, this survey increases our understanding of dynamic transmission among intestinal helminths recorded in Yucatán, Mexico.


2017 ◽  
Vol 145 (11) ◽  
pp. 2287-2295 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. A. PANTI-MAY ◽  
R. R. C. DE ANDRADE ◽  
Y. GURUBEL-GONZÁLEZ ◽  
E. PALOMO-ARJONA ◽  
L. SODÁ-TAMAYO ◽  
...  

SUMMARYThe house mouse (Mus musculus) and the black rat (Rattus rattus) are reservoir hosts for zoonotic pathogens, several of which cause neglected tropical diseases (NTDs). Studies of the prevalence of these NTD-causing zoonotic pathogens, in house mice and black rats from tropical residential areas are scarce. Three hundred and two house mice and 161 black rats were trapped in 2013 from two urban neighbourhoods and a rural village in Yucatan, Mexico, and subsequently tested forTrypanosoma cruzi,Hymenolepis diminutaandLeptospira interrogans. Using the polymerase chain reaction we detectedT. cruziDNA in the hearts of 4·9% (8/165) and 6·2% (7/113) of house mice and black rats, respectively. We applied the sedimentation technique to detect eggs ofH. diminutain 0·5% (1/182) and 14·2% (15/106) of house mice and black rats, respectively. Through the immunofluorescent imprint method,L. interroganswas identified in 0·9% (1/106) of rat kidney impressions. Our results suggest that the black rat could be an important reservoir forT. cruziandH. diminutain the studied sites. Further studies examining seasonal and geographical patterns could increase our knowledge on the epidemiology of these pathogens in Mexico and the risk to public health posed by rodents.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Bruno Fitte

El objetivo de este trabajo fue integrar conocimientos parasitológicos y socio-ambientales a través del estudio de parásitos y patógenos de roedores urbanos presentes en el Gran La Plata, enfatizando en el estudio de especies de importancia sanitaria humana y animal. Para esto, se identificaron a las especies parásitas y patógenas presentes en las tres especies de roedores urbanos (Rattus norvegicus, Rattus rattus y Mus musculus), capturados en siete barrios con diferente grado de urbanización y con distintas características ambientales y estructurales. Se analizaron las relaciones entre la prevalencia / abundancia media de los taxones parásitos y patógenos con variables de los hospedadores y del ambiente. Por otro lado, se evaluó la percepción social con respecto a roedores urbanos y patologías asociadas en dos barrios con características estructurales y ambientales contrastantes, y resultados parasitológicos distantes. Paralelamente, en uno de esos barrios, el cual reveló una de las mayores riquezas de parásitos y patógenos, se propuso un programa modelo que consistió en una serie de talleres y actividades con alumnas/os de dos escuelas secundarias, con el fin de proponer acciones que tiendan a mitigar la problemática a través del intercambio de saberes y la generación de estrategias en conjunto para el control y prevención a nivel barrial, considerando las observaciones de la población y los resultados parasitológicos obtenidos. Se analizaron un total de 136 individuos roedores a partir de un esfuerzo de muestreo de 1046 trampas/noche de trampas tipo Sherman; 962 trampas/noche de jaulas; y 788 trampas/noche de trampas de golpe. Se identificaron un total de 16 taxones de parásitos y patógenos, correspondiendo a protozoos (n=3), helmintos (n=10), virus (n=1), bacterias (n=2). Del total de patógenos y parásitos hallados, siete fueron identificados como zoonóticos: Toxoplasma gondii (protozoos); Hymenolepis diminuta, Rodentolepis nana y Strobilocercus fasciolaris (helmintos); Hantavirus Seoul (virus); Leptospira borgpetersenii y Leptospira interrogans (bacterias). A su vez, se registró el protozoo enzoótico Neospora caninum. Se aportaron detalles morfológicos y biométricos en las especies de helmintos. Hantavirus Seoul en el hospedador R. rattus representa el primer registro en Argentina. Además, T. gondii y el protozoo enzoótico N. caninum corresponden a los primeros registros en roedores en Argentina, Todos los demás hallazgos de parásitos y patógenos (incluidos los no zoonóticos), corresponden a nuevos registros para el área del Gran La Plata. Se evaluaron diferentes factores del hospedador y del ambiente para explicar la composición y abundancia del ensamble parasitario en cada individuo hospedador, resultando la especie hospedadora el único estadísticamente significativo. Así, se comprobó que los ensambles de parásitos y patógenos son similares entre las especies de Rattus spp., pero que difieren del observado en M. musculus. Para cada especie hospedadora se analizaron en forma separada las prevalencias y abundancias de cada taxón parásito resultando estadísticamente significativa las siguientes asociaciones: la prevalencia y abundancia de S. fasciolaris y la prevalencia de N. brasiliensis en R. norvegicus fueron mayores en la estación fría; mientras que la presencia de arroyo en el barrio explicó la prevalencia de N. brasiliensis en R. rattus y S. ratti en R. norvegicus. Por otro lado, el estudio sobre percepción social reflejó una preocupación común en relación al rol que juegan los roedores urbanos como reservorios y trasmisores de enfermedades zoonóticas. Las patologías mencionadas con más frecuencia por la población estudiada fueron el Hantavirus, la rabia, y la Leptospirosis. Además, a partir de las respuestas obtenidas se pudo concluir en que en los barrios periféricos la presencia de roedores urbanos dentro de los hogares y en el barrio en general es mayor que en el Casco urbano de La Plata. También, a partir del programa planteado en las escuelas secundarias, se comprobó que las/os alumnos reconocían la existencia de roedores en el barrio y hogares, pero un alto porcentaje no conocía acerca de su implicancia sanitaria. Esto cambió hacia el final del programa, cuando las/os alumnas/os fueron capaces de identificar diferentes patologías asociadas a los roedores, y plantear alternativas y medidas de posible aplicación a nivel barrial para el control de roedores urbanos. Así, se resalta la importancia de focalizar esfuerzos que permitan promover acciones comunitarias, principalmente en estas áreas marginales presentes en toda Latinoamérica, las cuales en su mayoría no están nunca incluidas en proyectos de urbanización formal.


1998 ◽  
Vol 335 (3) ◽  
pp. 495-498 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joanne L. PENNOCK ◽  
Jerzy M. BEHNKE ◽  
Quentin D. BICKLE ◽  
Eileen DEVANEY ◽  
Richard K. GRENCIS ◽  
...  

Macrophage-migration-inhibition factor (MIF) is an essential stimulator of mammalian T-lymphocyte-dependent adaptive immunity, hence MIF orthologues might be expressed by infectious organisms as an immunosubversive stratagem. Since MIF actively catalyses the tautomerization of the methyl ester of l-dopachrome (using dopachrome tautomerase), the occurrence of MIF orthologues in several parasitic helminths was investigated by assaying and characterizing such activity. Evidence of MIF orthologues (dopachrome tautomerase) was found in the soluble fraction of the nematodes Trichinella spiralis (stage 4 larvae) and Trichuris muris (adults), and the filarial nematode Brugia pahangi (adults). The MIF orthologues of Tr. muris(TmMIF) and B. pahangi (BpMIF) were purified to homogeneity using phenyl-agarose chromatography, that of T. spiralis (TsMIF) required a further step: cation-exchange FPLC. Retention time on reverse-phase HPLC and Mr on SDS/PAGE of the nematode MIFs were similar to those of human MIF. N-terminal sequences (19 residues) of TsMIF and TmMIF showed 47 and 36% identity, respectively, with human MIF. The N-terminal sequence of BpMIF (14 residues) was identical to that of an MIF orthologue in the genome of B. malayi (Swiss-Prot, P91850) and showed 43% identity to either human or TsMIF. TsMIF had 10-fold higher dopachrome tautomerase activity than MIF from the other sources. The enzyme activities of TsMIF, BpMIF and TmMIF were less sensitive to inhibition by haematin (I50: > 15 µM, > 15 µM and 2.6 µM, respectively) than that of human MIF (I50 0.2 µM). Significant dopachrome tautomerase or phenyl-agarose-purifiable MIF-like protein was not detected in the soluble fraction of the nematodes Heligmosomoides polygyrus and Nippostrongylus brasiliensis, the cestode Hymenolepis diminuta, or the trematodes Schistosoma mansoni, S. japonicum and S. haematobium, or the free-living nematode, Caenorhabditis elegans, which does contain an MIF-related gene.


2008 ◽  
Vol 45 (3) ◽  
pp. 126-129 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Gomez Villafañe ◽  
M. Robles ◽  
M. Busch

AbstractThe aims of this research were: 1) to determine the helminth parasite fauna of seventy two Rattus norvegicus (Berkenhout, 1769) individuals inhabiting poultry farms in the Pampean region of Argentina; 2) to examine the relationship between parasitism and individual characteristics of the hosts, and 3) to analyze the associations among helminths. The study was carried out in twenty-four poultry farms from autumn 2000 to winter 2001. Nematodes were found in the intestine or caecum rectum of the 74 % of rats and cestodes were found along all the intestine of the 28 % of rats. Heterakis spumosa (Travassos 1914) was a central species, whereas Syphacia muris, Yamaguti 1941, Nippostrongylus brasiliensis (Travassos 1914) and Hymenolepis diminuta (Rudolphi 1819) were satellite species. Helminths do not affect rat survival and growth of rats. Rats parasitized with H. spumosa and H. diminuta were larger and older than non-parasitized rats. The intensity of infection with H. spumosa significantly increased with rat age. Rats parasitized with Nippostrongylus brasiliensis and Syphacia muris did not differ in size and age with respect to non-parasitized ones. The mean intensity of infections per host was 33.74, 74.28, higher than 200, and 3.10 for H. spumosa, S. muris, N. brasiliensis and H. diminuta, respectively. The mean intensity of infection with H. spumosa was higher in summer than in the other seasons, while the higher mean intensity of infection with N. brasiliensis and S. muris occurred in autumn. Infections with Heterakis spumosa and Syphacia muris, and with Syphacia muris and Nippostrongylus brasiliensis were independent; while Heterakis spumosa and Nippostrongylus brasiliensis were negatively associated.


2010 ◽  
Vol 62 (4) ◽  
pp. 1091-1100 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Kataranovski ◽  
Milena Kataranovski ◽  
Isidora Deljanin

The aims of this study were to provide baseline knowledge about intestinal parasites in Norway rats (Rattus norvegicus) that inhabit the Belgrade area, and to analyze the associations among helminths. Of 302 trapped rats, 52% were females and 48% males, with 39% and approx. 37% of juvenile-subadult individuals, per sex, respectively. The following parasites were detected (with their respective prevalence): Cestoda - Hymenolepis diminuta (30.46%) and Rodentolepis fraterna (12.58%); Nematoda - Heterakis spumosa (36.75%), Nippostrongylus brasiliensis (16.22%), Capillaria sp. (5.96%), Trichuris muris (5.96%), Syphacia muris (4.30%) and Strongylus sp. larvae (0.33%). Flukes (Trematoda) were not recorded. Of all examined rats, 68.54% were found to harbor at least one parasite species, with higher prevalence in male hosts and in adult individuals. There were no age-related differences in the prevalence of infection with individual helminth species. Multiple infections occurred with up to four species per rat showing different combinations of parasite infections. These are the first records of the gastrointestinal helminth fauna of Norway rats in Serbia.


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