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1.
No systematic studies of the occurrence of Trichinella in wildlife have been carried out in Northern Ireland (NI) in recent years, and the last reports of trichinellosis in livestock and human outbreaks in NI date back to 1979 and 1945, respectively. In this study, covering the period 2003/2004 and 2007/2008, a total of 443 red foxes (Vulpes vulpes) were collected throughout the country and screened for trichinellosis using a modified muscle digest method. One examined animal was found to be infected with larvae from Trichinella spiralis, indicating a national prevalence in NI of Trichinella in foxes of 0.2%. This prevalence compares well to the findings reported from the bordering Republic of Ireland [Rafter, P., Marucci, G., Brangan, P., Pozio, E., 2005. Rediscovery of Trichinella spiralis in red foxes (Vulpes vulpes) in Ireland after 30 years of oblivion. J. Infect. 50, 61–65] and could be a further indication for a sylvatic Trichinella life cycle existing independently from the domestic cycle.  相似文献   

2.
In 1982-1983, 144 muscle samples from 11 different species of wild carnivores from southwestern Quebec, Canada, were examined for the presence of Trichinella spiralis larvae, using direct microscopic examination and the peptic digestion method. Two red foxes (Vulpes vulpes) (out of 29) and one pine marten (Martes americana) (out of 56) were found positive, giving a 2.1% prevalence for the whole sample.  相似文献   

3.
Farming of fur animals represents an important income in Estonia. Even though Trichinella worms does not induce a symptomatic disease in carnivores, the carcasses of skinned animals can increase the biomass of the parasite in the environment, if they are not properly destroyed. The aim of the present survey was to study the prevalence of Trichinella worms in farmed fur animals of Estonia. Of 281 muscle samples from blue foxes (Alopex lagopus), silver foxes (Vulpes vulpes fulva), minks (Mustela vison) and raccoon dogs (Nyctereutes procyonoides), which were collected in eight farms, Trichinella larvae have been detected in 21 animals (8%) from two farms by HCl-pepsin digestion. The highest number of larvae per gram of muscle was found in the front limb muscles. Larvae of the 21 isolates have been identified as Trichinella britovi or Trichinella nativa by a multiplex-PCR analysis.  相似文献   

4.
One thousand one hundred and fifty-one free-living foxes (Vulpes vulpes) from different parts of Sweden were investigated. Totally 19.6 % were infected with trichinella. Infected foxes were found in all counties except the geographically isolated island of Gotland. In the different counties 6–48 % of investigated foxes were infected.Trichinella was more common in old foxes than in young, 40 % and 11 %, respectively. Regarding male and female, however, the frequency was the same.The number of trichinella per g of muscle varied between 0.05 and 200. Less than 1.0 trichinella larva per g muscle was established in 27.3 % of the foxes, between 1 and 49.9 trichinella larvae in 69.3 % and 50 or more trichinella larvae per g muscle in 3.4 % of the foxes. The number of trichinella larvae per infected fox was roughly the same in both sexes as well as in different age groups.The potential danger of transmitting trichinella from foxes and other carnivores to swine and man is pointed out.The high frequency of trichinella in foxes, 19.6 %, was compared to the very low frequency in swine, 0.00018 %, and in man, 0.00003 %.  相似文献   

5.
Only a few studies have compared the muscle distribution of the different Trichinella genotypes. In this study, data were obtained from a series of experimental infections in pigs, wild boars, foxes and horses, with the aim of evaluating the predilection sites of nine well-defined genotypes of Trichinella. Necropsy was performed at 5, 10, 20 and 40 weeks post inoculation. From all host species, corresponding muscles/muscle groups were examined by artificial digestion. In foxes where all Trichinella species established in high numbers, the encapsulating species were found primarily in the tongue, extremities and diaphragm, whereas the non-encapsulating species were found primarily in the diaphragm. In pigs and wild boars, only Trichinella spiralis, Trichinella pseudospiralis and Trichinella nelsoni showed extended persistency of muscle larvae (ML), but for all genotypes the tongue and the diaphragm were found to be predilection sites. This tendency was most obvious in light infections. In the horses, T. spiralis, Trichinella britovi, and T. pseudospiralis all established at high levels with predilection sites in the tongue, the masseter and the diaphragm. For all host species, high ML burdens appeared to be more evenly distributed with less obvious predilection than in light infections; predilection site muscles harbored a relatively higher percent of the larval burden in light infections than in heavy infections. This probably reflects increasing occupation of available muscle fibers as larger numbers of worms accumulate. Predilection sites appear to be influenced primarily by host species and secondarily by the age and level of infection.  相似文献   

6.
In order to evaluate the present epidemiological situation of Trichinella infection in wild animals in Hokkaido, Japan, red foxes (Vulpes vulpes), raccoon dogs (Nyctereutes procyonoides) , brown bears (Ursus arctos) , martens (Martes melampus), rodents and insectivores captured in Hokkaido were examined for muscle larvae by the artificial digestion method from 2000 to 2006. Foxes (44/319, 13.8%), raccoon dogs (6/77, 7.8%) and brown bears (4/126, 3.2%) were found to be infected with Trichinella larvae and all other animal species evaluated were negative. Multiplex PCR and DNA sequencing revealed that larvae from a fox captured in Otofuke, in south-eastern Hokkaido, were T. nativa, and larvae from 27 animals including 21 foxes, 2 raccoon dogs and 4 brown bears captured in western Hokkaido were Trichinella T9.  相似文献   

7.
The application of the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) in the detection of Trichinella spiralis infections in pigs is presented. Two experiments using conventionally raised pigs infected with various numbers of T. spiralis larvae are described. Blood samples were collected for serological examination, prior to and at various days post infection (pi). At slaughter, on the 28th day pi, samples from the diaphragm were collected for isolation of muscle larvae by means of the digestion method. The results from these sera were compared with those from non-infected conventionally raised pigs. At day 28 pi, 21 out of 33 infected pigs showed positive ELISA results. In only two of those serologically positive animals were no larvae detected at slaughter. Of the 12 infected pigs with a negative ELISA result, only two harboured more than 3 larvae/g (the detection limit of trichinoscopy). Of the nine non-infected control animals, one had a false positive ELISA result. The significance of these findings in relation to slaughterhouse control is discussed. ELISA, therefore, presents an alternative to other detection methods for the control of T. spiralis infections in pigs.  相似文献   

8.
In Slovakia, monitoring the prevalence of Trichinella spp. in wildlife was performed since 2000 in the main reservoir animals, the red fox (Vulpes vulpes) and wild boar (Sus scrofa), using artificial digestion method as recommended by International Commission on Trichinellosis. The results of investigation performed in 5270 red foxes showed that Trichinella infection is widespread across Slovakia and prevalence increased significantly from 4.9% in 2000 to 20.5% in 2007. Recently, a higher Trichinella prevalence (0.11%) in wild boars was also demonstrated. The results indicate that foxes and wild boars are involved in the spread of Trichinella, although the latter host species seems to play a secondary role in the maintenance of the sylvatic cycle in Slovakia. Trichinella britovi is the predominant species circulating in Slovakia, both in foxes and wild boars, and Trichinella spiralis occurs only sporadically. Mixed infections of T. britovi and Trichinella pseudospiralis were recorded in 2005 in one wild boar from Eastern Slovakia and in 2006 in one red fox from the same region. These findings are important with respect to an outbreak caused by T. pseudospiralis in a pig farm in the same district 3 years ago. This study provides a complex picture on Trichinella occurrence in all regions of Slovakia and may be a good basis for evaluating the risk of parasite transmission to the domestic cycle and human beings.  相似文献   

9.
To evaluate infectivity for carnivores as well as other biological characteristics of the newly described Trichinella papuae, eight red foxes were experimentally infected with the parasite. Five weeks after inoculation, T. papuae larvae were recovered from nine different muscle types. The larvae recovered from muscle tissue were shown to be infective to mice, to have a very low tolerance to freezing, and to survive longer than the other Trichinella genotypes in decaying tissue up to 5 weeks after infection.  相似文献   

10.
Flow cytometry analyses were used to evaluate the contribution of apoptotic and necrotic lymphocytes in the selected organs of Trichinella spiralis infected mice treated with phytohaemagglutinin-P (PHA-P). The Tunnel method was used to examine apoptosis in a cryostat section from the jejunum and masseter muscle. CFW mice (Groups I and II) were infected with 200 larvae of T. spiralis. PHA-P was administered intravenously at a dose of 10 mg/kg 24 h prior to infection in Group II mice only. Group III mice were treated with PHA-P without T. spiralis infection, and Group IV mice were untreated controls. The lymphocytes obtained from the spleen, mesenteric lymph nodes (MLN) and muscular inflammatory infiltration on 7, 14, 21, 28, 35, 42 and 60 days post infection (DPI) were incubated with the Annexin-V-Fluos Staining Kit (Roche). The cryostat preparation made from the jejunum and masseter muscle was evaluated using a fluorescence microscope. PHA-P administration stimulated apoptosis in the jejunal mucosa and in the muscular inflammatory infiltration. In Group I mice, infected with T. spiralis only, the highest percentage of apoptotic cells was found on 7 DPI in the spleen and in MLN, and on 14 DPI among the cells of the muscular inflammatory infiltration. The peak of the necrotic lymphocytes was found on 7 DPI in the spleen, on 28 DPI in MLN, and on 21 DPI in the cells of muscular inflammatory infiltration. In Group II mice, infected with T. spiralis and treated with PHA-P, the peak in apoptotic cells occurred on 7 DPI in the spleen and in the muscular inflammatory infiltration. The highest level of necrotic lymphocytes was observed only on 7 DPI in the muscular inflammatory infiltration. Percentage of necrotic lymphocytes in the spleen was the same and in MLN it was lower than in Group I (T. spiralis only). Moreover, the number of muscle larvae in mice treated with PHA-P (Group II) was lower than in Group I (T. spiralis only).  相似文献   

11.
The effects of simulatenous infection of pigs with Oesophagostomum spp. and Trichinella spiralis on the interpretation of the Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay (ELISA) for trichinosis were examined. Extinction values were observed from four groups of pigs. The first group acted as uninfected controls, the second was infected only with Oesophagostomum spp., the third with T. spiralis alone and the fourth by both nematodes.It was found that the pigs infected with T. spiralis could be differentiated from the others, but that those infected with both species had lower extinction values than the group with T. spiralis alone. The differences may be related to the numbers of T. spiralis larvae able to establish and develop into adults in the small intestine of the host. Those infected with Oesophagostomum spp. alone showed no rise in extinction values, and it was concluded that there was no cross-reaction in the ELISA between thos pecies and T. spiralis antigen.  相似文献   

12.
Rats which were immunized with increasing doses of Trichinella spiralis muscle larvae per os and inoculated with 2 000 Nippostrongylus brasiliensis third-stage larvae 11 day after the last immunizing dose harbored significantly fewer N. brasiliensis adults at necropsy than did unimmunized controls. Immunized rats were solidly immune to homologous infection with T. spiralis. Some N. brasiliensis infective larvae incubated in vitro at 37°C in T. spiralis antiserum developed mild oral precipitates. They developed strong oral, excretory pore and occasionally anal precipitates in homologous antiglobulins, and none in normal rat sera or globulins. T. spiralis larvae developed strong oral precipitates in homologous antisera, but none in N. brasiliensis antiglobulins or normal rat sera or globulins. Inflammation, altered intestinal conditions and delayed hypersensitivity following T. spiralis infection may be contributing to the cross-resistance observed.  相似文献   

13.
Freezing of fox carcasses to minimize professional hazard of infection with Echinococcus multilocularis is recommended in endemic areas, but this could influence the detection of Trichinella larvae in the same host species. A method based on artificial digestion of frozen fox muscle, combined with larva isolation by a sequential sieving method (SSM), was validated using naturally infected foxes from Latvia. The validated SSM was used to detect dead Trichinella muscle larvae (ML) in frozen muscle samples of 369 red foxes from the Netherlands, of which one fox was positive (0.067 larvae per gram). This result was compared with historical Trichinella findings in Dutch red foxes. Molecular analysis using 5S PCR showed that both T. britovi and T. nativa were present in the Latvian foxes, without mixed infections. Of 96 non-frozen T. britovi ML, 94% was successfully sequenced, whereas this was the case for only 8.3% of 72 frozen T. britovi ML. The single Trichinella sp. larva that was recovered from the positive Dutch fox did not yield PCR product, probably due to severe freeze-damage. In conclusion, the SSM presented in this study is a fast and effective method to detect dead Trichinella larvae in frozen meat. We showed that the Trichinella prevalence in Dutch red fox was 0.27% (95% CI 0.065-1.5%), in contrast to 3.9% in the same study area fifteen years ago. Moreover, this study demonstrated that the efficacy of 5S PCR for identification of Trichinella britovi single larvae from frozen meat is not more than 8.3%.  相似文献   

14.
15.
The influence of host genetics on the susceptibility to primary Trichinella spiralis infection has been extensively studied in a mouse model, but has not been clarified for rats. Analyses of interstrain and intrastrain genetic variation in response to infectious agents could be beneficial not only for elucidating the genetic basis of host resistance/susceptibility, but for revealing immune response mechanisms as well. The aim of this study was to analyse interstrain differences in worm burdens and cytokine production between Albino Oxford (AO) and Dark Agouti (DA) rats in muscle phase of T. spiralis infection. Clear strain-dependent variation was observed in the number of T. spiralis larvae per gram (lpg) of muscle tissue where values for DA rats (626.7 ± 171 lpg) vastly exceeded those found in AO rats (49.8 ± 25.9 lpg, p < 0.001). Differences between the strains were also noticed in key cytokine levels. In infected AO rats, the cytokine production remained in favor of Th1 type response, while infected DA rats showed a shift towards a Th2 type response. The level of regulatory IL-10 was significantly increased only in T. spiralis infected DA rats. Our results provide evidence that DA rats express higher susceptibility to T. spiralis infection in comparison to AO rats with respect to muscle larvae burden. The infection in DA rats was accompanied by the production of anti-inflammatory cytokines, while the response of AO rats was characterized by a proinflammatory type of immune response.  相似文献   

16.
Trichinellosis is one of the most important zoonotic diseases in Romania. Even though the disease is a serious public health concern, only a limited number of Trichinella isolates have been identified at the species level; in the past, all larvae were assumed to be Trichinella spiralis. The present study was conducted to identify Trichinella spp. circulating among wild and domestic animals in Romania, using PCR-based methods. Trichinella spp. larvae originating from 54 wild and 23 domestic mammals were examined. No Trichinella spp. larvae were detected in muscle samples of 182 birds. T. spiralis and Trichinella britovi were the only two species identified in the 40 isolates that yielded a positive PCR result. Overall, T. britovi was more prevalent (n = 26; 65%) than T. spiralis (n = 14; 35%). T. spiralis was the predominant species found in domestic animals (n = 9; 75%), while T. britovi was more prevalent in wildlife (n = 24; 86%). No mixed infections were found. The highest prevalence of Trichinella infection was detected in wolves (11/35; 31%), in European wild cats (4/28; 14%), and in red foxes (5/71; 7%). The distribution of Trichinella spp. in Romania does not show a species-specific clustering; both of the two species found were present over the entire range of counties studied.  相似文献   

17.
Trichinella spiralis and Trichinella britovi are species that are frequently found in domestic pigs and various sylvatic animals in Croatia. During routine trichinoscopy, non-encapsulated larvae were detected in the muscle tissue of a domestic pig. Artificial digestion revealed a larvae burden of 602 muscle larvae per gram of tissue. Tissue section analysis confirmed the presence of non-encapsulated larvae. Multiplex PCR identified the larvae as T. pseudospiralis. This observation is consistent with the reports of a local veterinary inspector who described the presence of non-encapsulated Trichinella in four individual cases over the last 2 years. This is the first report of T. pseudospiralis in Croatia and one of very few cases of T. pseudospiralis infection described in domestic pigs. The detection of non-encapsulated larvae stresses the need for implementation of artificial digestion instead of trichinoscopy for the detection and identification of Trichinella infections.  相似文献   

18.
In Sweden, the prevalence of Trichinella infection in domestic pigs has greatly decreased since the 1970s, with no reports in the past 4 years. However, infected wild animals continue to be found. The objective of the present study was to identify the species of Trichinella present in animals of Sweden, so as to contribute to the knowledge on the distribution area and hosts useful for the prevention and control of this zoonosis. In the period 1985-2003, Trichinella larvae were detected in the muscles of 81/1800 (4.5%) red foxes (Vulpes vulpes), 1/6 (16.7%) arctic fox (Alopex lagopus), 1/7 (14.3%) wolf (Canis lupus), 10/200 (5.0%) lynxes (Lynx lynx), 4/8000 (0.05%) wild boars (Sus scrofa), and 27/66 x 10(6) (0.000041%) domestic pigs. All four Trichinella species previously found in Europe were detected (Trichinella spiralis, T. nativa, T. britovi and T. pseudospiralis). The non-encapsulated species T. pseudospiralis was detected in three wild boars from Holo (Stockholm area) and in one lynx from Froso (Ostersund area), suggesting that this species is widespread in Sweden. These findings are consistent with those of a study from Finland, both for the unexpected presence of T. pseudospiralis infection and the presence of the same four Trichinella species, suggesting that this epidemiological situation is present in the entire Scandinavian region. The widespread diffusion of T. pseudospiralis in the Scandinavian region is also important in terms of it potential impact on public health, given that human infection can occur and the difficulties to detect it by the trichinelloscopic examination.  相似文献   

19.
The aim of the present study was to investigate the prevalence of Trichinella infection in wolves (Canis lupus) in a 17,468 km2 area in Croatia. Muscle samples were collected from 67 wolves between 1996 and 2007 and analyzed by artificial digestion. Muscle larvae were detected in 21 wolves (31%) and genotyped by multiplex PCR. Trichinella britovi was the predominant species confirmed in 90% (19 wolves) while Trichinella spiralis was detected in 9% (2 wolves). The presence of the so called “domestic” Trichinella species was a surprise since, to date, only T. britovi had been reported in wild animals in this region. The larval burdens in infected animals ranged from 0.3 to 45.9 larvae per gram. The prevalence of infected animals varied by geographic region; infected animals were found in the region of Gorski Kotar (20%) which has very similar environment to the region of Lika, where almost all wolves were found infected. Interestingly, this is the first report of infected wolves in Dalmatia.  相似文献   

20.
Survey for Trichinella spp. in red foxes (Vulpes vulpes) in Belgium.   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Concurrently with a survey for Echinococcus multilocularis in the red fox (Vulpes vulpes) in Flanders, northern Belgium, serological and parasitological analyses for Trichinella spp. were carried out from 1996 to 1999. Muscle samples from foxes in Wallonia, southern Belgium, were obtained during a survey for rabies and alveolar echinococcosis from 1998 to 2000.In muscle samples from tongue, diaphragm, hindlegs and tail of 179 Flemish foxes no larvae were found by trichinoscopy. Serum and muscle juice of, respectively 176 and 26 animals were examined using an ELISA for the detection of antibodies against excretory-secretory (ES) antigen. There were eight (4.5%) positive sera, but no positive muscle juice samples.All muscle samples from 639 foxes in Wallonia proved to be negative for larvae in artificial digestion. Serum and muscle juice of 130 and 478 foxes, respectively were examined in ES-ELISA. There were 61 (46.9%) positive sera and 90 (18.8%) positive muscle juice samples. A comparison between 88 serum and muscle juice samples of the same foxes showed that only half of the serum-positive animals were detected using muscle juice. However, for establishing the true meaning of these results, a more profound epidemiological study on the vulpine population in Belgium is necessary.  相似文献   

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