34 results on '"paleoparasitology"'
Search Results
2. [Untitled]
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Morgana Camacho, Thaíla Pessanha, Daniela Leles, Juliana MF Dutra, Rosângela Silva, Sheila Mendonça de Souza, and Adauto Araujo
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coprolites ,paleoparasitology ,sambaqui ,archaeological sediments ,helminthiasis ,ancient diseases ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Parasite findings in sambaquis (shell mounds) are scarce. Although the 121 shell mound samples were previously analysed in our laboratory, we only recently obtained the first positive results. In the sambaqui of Guapi, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, paleoparasitological analysis was performed on sediment samples collected from various archaeological layers, including the superficial layer as a control. Eggs of Acanthocephala, Ascaridoidea and Heterakoidea were found in the archaeological layers. We applied various techniques and concluded that Lutz's spontaneous sedimentation technique is effective for concentrating parasite eggs in sambaqui soil for microscopic analysis.
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- 2013
3. Studies on protozoa in ancient remains - A Review
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Liesbeth Frías, Daniela Leles, and Adauto Araújo
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paleoparasitology ,mummies ,coprolites ,infectious diseases ,protozoa ,paleoepidemiology ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Paleoparasitological research has made important contributions to the understanding of parasite evolution and ecology. Although parasitic protozoa exhibit a worldwide distribution, recovering these organisms from an archaeological context is still exceptional and relies on the availability and distribution of evidence, the ecology of infectious diseases and adequate detection techniques. Here, we present a review of the findings related to protozoa in ancient remains, with an emphasis on their geographical distribution in the past and the methodologies used for their retrieval. The development of more sensitive detection methods has increased the number of identified parasitic species, promising interesting insights from research in the future.
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- 2013
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4. Studies on protozoa in ancient remains - A Review
- Author
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Liesbeth Frías, Daniela Leles, and Adauto Araújo
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paleoparasitology ,mummies ,coprolites ,infectious diseases ,protozoa ,paleoepidemiology ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Paleoparasitological research has made important contributions to the understanding of parasite evolution and ecology. Although parasitic protozoa exhibit a worldwide distribution, recovering these organisms from an archaeological context is still exceptional and relies on the availability and distribution of evidence, the ecology of infectious diseases and adequate detection techniques. Here, we present a review of the findings related to protozoa in ancient remains, with an emphasis on their geographical distribution in the past and the methodologies used for their retrieval. The development of more sensitive detection methods has increased the number of identified parasitic species, promising interesting insights from research in the future.
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- 2013
5. Syphacia sp. (Nematoda: Oxyuridae) in coprolites of Kerodon rupestris Wied, 1820 (Rodentia: Caviidae) from 5,300 years BP in northeastern Brazil
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Mônica Vieira de Souza, Luciana Sianto, Marcia Chame, Luiz Fernando Ferreira, and Adauto Araújo
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Kerodon rupestris ,Syphacia ,paleoparasitology ,coprolites ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
We present the results of paleoparasitological analyses in coprolites of Kerodon rupestris, rodent endemic to rocky areas of Brazil's semiarid region. The coprolites were collected from excavations at the archaeological site of Toca dos Coqueiros, in the National Park of Serra da Capivara, southeastern of state of Piauí. Syphacia sp. (Nematoda: Oxyuridae) eggs were identified in coprolites dated at 5,300 ± 50 years before present. This is the first record of the genus Syphacia in rodent coprolites in the Americas.
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- 2012
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6. Paleoparasitological results for rodent coprolites from Santa Cruz Province, Argentina
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Norma Haydée Sardella, Martín Horacio Fugassa, Diego Damián Rindel, and Rafael Agustín Goñi
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paleoparasitology ,helminths ,rodents ,Patagonia ,nematodes ,anoplocephalids ,coprolites ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
The aim of this study was to examine the parasite remains present in rodent coprolites collected from the archaeological site Alero Destacamento Guardaparque (ADG) located in the Perito Moreno National Park (Santa Cruz Province, 47º57'S 72º05'W). Forty-eight coprolites were obtained from the layers 7, 6 and 5 of ADG, dated at 6,700 ± 70, 4,900 ± 70 and 3,440 ± 70 years BP, respectively. The faecal samples were processed and examined using paleoparasitological procedures. A total of 582 eggs of parasites were found in 47 coprolites. Samples were positive for eggs of Trichuris sp. (Nematoda: Trichuridae), Calodium sp., Eucoleus sp., Echinocoleus sp. and an unidentified capillariid (Nematoda: Capillariidae) and for eggs of Monoecocestus (Cestoda: Anoplocephalidae). Quantitative differences among layer for both coprolites and parasites were recorded. In this study, the specific filiations of parasites, their zoonotic importance, the rodent identity, on the basis of previous zooarchaeological knowledge, and the environmental conditions during the Holocene in the area are discussed.
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- 2010
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7. Zoonotic parasites associated with felines from the Patagonian Holocene
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Martín Horacio Fugassa, María Ornela Beltrame, María S Bayer, and Norma Haydée Sardella
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paleoparasitology ,feline coprolites ,archaeological site ,ancient parasitism ,Middle Holocene ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Feline coprolites were examined for parasites with the aim of studying ancient infections that occurred in the Patagonian region during the Holocene period. Eggs compatible to Trichuris sp., Calodium sp., Eucoleus sp., Nematodirus sp., Oesophagostomum sp. (Nematoda), Monoecocestus sp. (Cestoda) and Eimeria macusaniensis (Coccidia) were recovered from faecal samples. The results obtained from the analysis provide evidence of consumption by felids of the viscera of both rodents and camelids. This knowledge allows for improved explanations as to the distribution of parasitism and its significance to the health of humans and animals inhabiting the area under study during the Middle Holocene.
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- 2009
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8. Paleoparasitology of Chagas disease: a review
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Adauto Araújo, Ana Maria Jansen, Karl Reinhard, and Luiz Fernando Ferreira
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paleoparasitology ,paleoepidemiology ,Chagas disease ,ancient DNA ,mummies ,Trypanosoma cruzi ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
One hundred years since the discovery of Chagas disease associated with Trypanosoma cruzi infection, growing attention has focused on understanding the evolution in parasite-human host interaction. This interest has featured studies and results from paleoparasitology, not only the description of lesions in mummified bodies, but also the recovery of genetic material from the parasite and the possibility of analyzing such material over time. The present study reviews the evidence of Chagas disease in organic remains excavated from archeological sites and discusses two findings in greater detail, both with lesions suggestive of chagasic megacolon and confirmed by molecular biology techniques. One of these sites is located in the United States, on the border between Texas and Mexico and the other in state of Minas Gerais, in the Brazilian cerrado (savannah). Dated prior to contact with Europeans, these results confirm that Chagas disease affected prehistoric human groups in other regions outside the Andean altiplanos and other transmission areas on the Pacific Coast, previously considered the origin of T. cruzi infection in the human host.
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- 2009
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9. Parasites in rodent coprolites from the historical archaeological site Alero Mazquiarán, Chubut Province, Argentina
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Norma Haydée Sardella and Martín Horacio Fugassa
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paleoparasitology ,helminths ,rodents ,Patagonia ,nematodes ,anoplocephaliids ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
The aim of this study was to examine the parasitic remains that were found in rodent coprolites collected from the archaeological site Alero Mazquiarán (Chubut Province, 45º44'15"S, 70°25'9"W), which is assigned to the interface of the Araucanian and Tehuelche cultures, dated at 212 ± 35 years B.P. The faecal material from two unidentified rodent species (X-10 and X-11) was collected from one human pelvic cavity found in a multiple burial. The faecal samples were processed and examined using paleoparasitological procedures. The X-10 coprolites were positive for eggs of Monoecocestus sp. (Cestoda: Anoplocephalidae) and the X-11 faeces were positive for Pterygodermatites sp. (Nematoda: Rictulariidae), Trichosomoides sp. (Nematoda: Trichosomoididae) and Monoecocestus sp. In this study, we discuss parasitic life cycles, the zoonotic importance of parasites and the behaviour of the aboriginal people.
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- 2009
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10. Paleoparasitological remains revealed by seven historic contexts from 'Place d'Armes', Namur, Belgium
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Gino Chaves da Rocha, Stephanie Harter- Lailheugue, Matthieu Le Bailly, Adauto Araújo, Luiz Fernando Ferreira, Nicolau Maués da Serra-Freire, and Françoise Bouchet
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paleoparasitology ,helminth eggs ,paleoepidemiology ,coprolites ,ancient diseases ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Human occupation for several centuries was recorded in the archaeological layers of "Place d'Armes", Namur, Belgium. Preventive archaeological excavations were carried out between 1996/1997 and seven historical strata were observed, from Gallo-Roman period up to Modern Times. Soil samples from cesspools, latrines, and structures-like were studied and revealed intestinal parasite eggs in the different archaeological contexts. Ascaris lumbricoides, A. suum, Trichuris trichiura, T. suis. Taenia sp., Fasciola hepatica, Diphyllobothrium sp., Capillaria sp. and Oxyuris equi eggs were found. Paleoparasitology confirmed the use of structures as latrines or cesspit as firstly supposed by the archaeologists. Medieval latrines were not only used for rejection of human excrements. The finding of Ascaris sp. and Trichuris sp. eggs may point to human's or wild swine's feces. Gallo-Roman people used to eat wild boar. Therefore, both A. suum and T. suis, or A. lumbricoides and T. trichuris, may be present, considering a swine carcass recovered into a cesspit. Careful sediment analysis may reveal its origin, although parasites of domestic animals can be found together with those of human's. Taenia sp. eggs identified in latrine samples indicate ingestion of uncooked beef with cysticercoid larvae. F. hepatica eggs suggest the ingestion of raw contaminated vegetables and Diphyllobothrium sp. eggs indicate contaminated fresh-water fish consumption. Ascaris sp. and Trichuris sp. eggs indicate fecal-oral infection by human and/or animal excrements.
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- 2006
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11. Quantitative paleoparasitology applied to archaeological sediments
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Martín H Fugassa, Adauto Araújo, and Ricardo A Guichón
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archaeological sediments ,parasite remains ,Trichuris eggs ,archaeological sediment technique ,paleoparasitology ,Southern Patagonia ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Three techniques to extract parasite remains from archaeological sediments were tested. The aim was to improve the sensibility of recommended paleoparasitological techniques applied in archaeological remains. Sediment collected from the pelvic girdle of a human body found in Cabo Vírgenes, Santa Cruz, Argentina, associated to a Spanish settlement founded in 1584 known as Nombre de Jesús, was used to search for parasites. Sediment close to the skull was used as control. The techniques recommended by Jones, Reinhard, and Dittmar and Teejen were used and compared with the modified technique presented here, developed to improve the sensibility to detect parasite remains. Positive results were obtained only with the modified technique, resulting in the finding of Trichuris trichiura eggs in the sediment.
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- 2006
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12. Parasitism in Kansas in the 1800s: a glimpse to the past through the analysis of grave sediments from Meadowlark cemetery
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Matthieu Le Bailly, Marcelo LC Gonçalves, Christine Lefèvre, Donna C Roper, Jeremy W Pye, Adauto Araujo, and Françoise Bouchet
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paleoparasitology ,ancient diseases ,paleoepidemiology ,protozoal infection ,amoebiasis ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
During the excavations of the XIX century Meadowlark cemetery (Manhattan, Kansas, US), samples of sediments were taken from around five skeletons, and analyzed to detect intestinal parasites. No helminth eggs were found, but immunological ELISA tests for Entamoeba histolytica were positive in three samples. The immunological techniques have been successfully used in paleoparasitology to detect protozoan infections. Amoebiasis could have been a severe disease in the past, especially where poor sanitary conditions prevailed, and there is evidence that this cemetery may have been used in a situation where poor sanitary conditions may have prevailed. The presence of this protozoan in US during the late XIX century gives information on the health of the population and provides additional data on the parasite's evolution since its appearance in the New World.
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- 2006
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13. Detection of Toxoplasma gondii DNA by polymerase chain reaction in experimentally desiccated tissues
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Márcia Andreia Barge Loução Terra, Alexandre Ribeiro Bello, Otilio Machado Bastos, Regina Reis Amendoeira, Janice Mary Chicarino de Oliveira Coelho, Luiz Fernando Ferreira, and Adauto Araújo
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paleoparasitology ,toxoplasmosis ,ancient DNA ,mummies ,parasitism ,Toxoplasma gondii ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Despite toxoplasmosis being a common infection among human and other warm-blooded animals worldwide, there are no findings about Toxoplasma gondii evolutionary forms in ancient populations. The molecular techniques used for amplification of genetic material have allowed recovery of ancient DNA (aDNA) from parasites contained in mummified tissues. The application of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to paleoparasitological toxoplasmosis research becomes a promising option, since it might allow diagnosis, acquisition of paleoepidemiological data, access to toxoplasmosis information related origin, evolution, and distribution among the ancient populations.Furthermore, it makes possible the analysis of parasite aDNA aiming at phylogenetic studies. To standardize and evaluate PCR applicability to toxoplasmosis paleodiagnostic, an experimental mummification protocol was tested using desiccated tissues from mice infected with the ME49 strain cysts, the chronic infection group (CIG), or infected with tachyzoites (RH strain), the acute infection group (AIG). Tissues were subjected to DNA extraction followed by PCR amplification of T. gondii B1 gene. PCR recovered T. gondii DNA in thigh muscle, encephalon, heart, and lung samples. AIG presented PCR positivity in encephalon, lungs, hearts, and livers. Based on this results, we propose this molecular approach for toxoplasmosis research in past populations.
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- 2004
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14. The fossil tabanids (Diptera Tabanidae): when they began to appreciate warm blood and when they began transmit diseases?
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Rafael Gioia Martins-Neto
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Diptera ,fossil Tabanidae ,paleoparasitology ,blood-suckers evolution ,diseases in the past ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
A discussion of the known fossil tabanids (Diptera Tabanidae) is presented based on fossil evidence. This includes the origin of the hemathophagy in the Brachycera, more specifically for tabanids. Several tabanid species in the extant fauna are vectors for disease-producing organisms that affect humans and animals. Bacteria, viruses, rickettsiae, protozoa, and filarial worms can be transmitted by them, causing such diseases as anthrax, tularemia, anaplasmosis, various forms of trypanosomiasis, Q fever, and filariasis. However, if tabanids are directly responsible for all of these diseases is not consensual and the known fossil evidence is presented here.
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- 2003
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15. The state of the art of paleoparasitological research in the old world
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Françoise Bouchet, Stéphanie Harter, and Matthieu Le Bailly
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paleoparasitology ,coprolites ,mummies ,platyhelminthes ,nemathelminthes ,Old World ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Paleoparasitology in the Old World has mainly concerned the study of latrine sediments and coprolites collected from mummified bodies or archaeological strata, mostly preserved by natural conditions. Human parasites recovered include cestodes, trematodes, and nematodes. The well preserved conditions of helminth eggs allowed paleoepidemiological approaches taking into account the number of eggs found by archaeological stratum. Tentatively, sanitation conditions were assessed for each archaeological period.
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- 2003
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16. Random amplified polymorphic DNA analysis of DNA extracted from Trichuris trichiura (Linnaeus, 1771) eggs and its prospective application to paleoparasitological studies
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Elaine Machado Martinez, Jorge Antonio Santos Correia, Erika Verissimo Villela, Antonio Nascimento Duarte, Luiz Fernando Ferreira, and Alexandre Ribeiro Bello
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random amplified polymorphic DNA analysis ,Trichuris trichiura ,paleoparasitology ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Random amplified polymorphic DNA analysis was applied to DNAs extracted from Trichuris trichiura eggs recovered from human fecal samples. Four out of 6 primers tested displayed 18 distinct and well defined polymorphic patterns, ranging from 650 to 3200 base pairs. These results, upon retrieval and DNA sequencing of some of these bands from agarose gels, might help in establishing T. trichiura specific genetic markers, not available yet, and an important step to design primers to be used in molecular diagnosis approaches.
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- 2003
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17. Human intestinal parasites in the past: new findings and a review
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Marcelo Luiz Carvalho Gonçalves, Adauto Araújo, and Luiz Fernando Ferreira
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paleoparasitology ,ancient diseases ,helminths ,protozoa ,coprolites ,mummies ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Almost all known human specific parasites have been found in ancient feces. A review of the paleoparasitological helminth and intestinal protozoa findings available in the literature is presented. We also report the new paleoparasitologic findings from the examination performed in samples collected in New and Old World archaeological sites. New finds of ancylostomid, Ascaris lumbricoides, Trichuris trichiura, Enterobius vermicularis, Trichostrongylus spp., Diphyllobothrium latum, Hymenolepis nana and Acantocephalan eggs are reported. According to the findings, it is probable that A. lumbricoides was originally a human parasite. Human ancylostomids, A. lumbricoides and T. trichiura, found in the New World in pre-Columbian times, have not been introduced into the Americas by land via Beringia. These parasites could not supported the cold climate of the region. Nomadic prehistoric humans that have crossed the Bering Land Bridge from Asia to the Americas in the last glaciation, probably during generations, would have lost these parasites, which life cycles need warm temperatures in the soil to be transmitted from host to host. Alternative routes are discussed for human parasite introduction into the Americas.
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- 2003
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18. Parasite remains in archaeological sites
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Françoise Bouchet, Niéde Guidon, Katharina Dittmar, Stephanie Harter, Luiz Fernando Ferreira, Sergio Miranda Chaves, Karl Reinhard, and Adauto Araújo
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paleoparasitology ,coprolites ,ectoparasites ,intestinal parasites ,mummies ,ancient diseases ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Organic remains can be found in many different environments. They are the most significant source for paleoparasitological studies as well as for other paleoecological reconstruction. Preserved paleoparasitological remains are found from the driest to the moistest conditions. They help us to understand past and present diseases and therefore contribute to understanding the evolution of present human sociality, biology, and behavior. In this paper, the scope of the surviving evidence will be briefly surveyed, and the great variety of ways it has been preserved in different environments will be discussed. This is done to develop to the most appropriated techniques to recover remaining parasites. Different techniques applied to the study of paleoparasitological remains, preserved in different environments, are presented. The most common materials used to analyze prehistoric human groups are reviewed, and their potential for reconstructing ancient environment and disease are emphasized. This paper also urges increased cooperation among archaeologists, paleontologists, and paleoparasitologists.
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- 2003
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19. Parasitism, the diversity of life, and paleoparasitology
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Adauto Araújo, Ana Maria Jansen, Françoise Bouchet, Karl Reinhard, and Luiz Fernando Ferreira
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evolution ,paleoparasitology ,parasitism ,infectious diseases ,ancient DNA ,origin of parasitism ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
The parasite-host-environment system is dynamic, with several points of equilibrium. This makes it difficult to trace the thresholds between benefit and damage, and therefore, the definitions of commensalism, mutualism, and symbiosis become worthless. Therefore, the same concept of parasitism may encompass commensalism, mutualism, and symbiosis. Parasitism is essential for life. Life emerged as a consequence of parasitism at the molecular level, and intracellular parasitism created evolutive events that allowed species to diversify. An ecological and evolutive approach to the study of parasitism is presented here. Studies of the origin and evolution of parasitism have new perspectives with the development of molecular paleoparasitology, by which ancient parasite and host genomes can be recovered from disappeared populations. Molecular paleoparasitology points to host-parasite co-evolutive mechanisms of evolution traceable through genome retrospective studies.
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- 2003
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20. Ecological analysis of Acari recovered from coprolites from archaeological site of Northeast Brazil
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Rita de Maria Seabra Nogueira de Candanedo Guerra, Gilberto Salles Gazêta, Marinete Amorim, Antonio Nascimento Duarte, and Nicolau Maués Serra-Freire
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mite ,paleoparasitology ,coprolite ,Northeast Brazil ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Coprolite samples of human and animal origin from the excavations performed at the archaeological site of Furna do Estrago, at Brejo da Madre de Deus in the state of Pernambuco, Brazil and sent to the Paleoparasitology Laboratory at Escola Nacional de Saúde Pública-Fiocruz, Rio de Janeiro, were analyzed for mites. After rehydratation and sedimentation of the coprolites, the alimentary contents and the sediments were examined and the mites collected and prepared in definitive whole mounts, using Hoyer's medium. Mites of the following suborders and orders were recovered: suborder Acaridia; order Gamasida; order Ixodida with the familiy Ixodidae (Ixodes sp. and Amblyomma sp. larvae, scutum, idiosoma, gnathosoma); order Oribatida (Aphelacarus sp., Apolohmannia sp., Eophypochthonius sp., Cosmochthonius sp., Pterobates sp., Poronoticae with pteromorphae not auriculate); order Astigmata with the families Atopomelidae (Chirodiscoides caviae), Anoetidae hypopus, Acaridae (Suidasia pontifica), Glycyphagidae (Blomia tropicalis), Pyroglyphidae (Hirstia passericola); order Actinedida with the family Tarsonemidae (Iponemus radiatae). The present work discusses the possibility of the preservation of the mite groups found up to the present day. We also discuss their relationship with the environment and their importance to present populations.
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- 2003
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21. Paleoparasitologic, paleogenetic and paleobotanic analysis of XVIII century coprolites from the church La Concepción in Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain
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Herminia Gijón Botella, José A Afonso Vargas, Matilde Arnay de la Rosa, Daniela Leles, Emilio González Reimers, Ana Carolina P Vicente, and Alena M Iñiguez
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paleoparasitology ,Ascaris sp. ,paleobotany ,coprolite ,paleogenetic ,Canary Islands ,ancient DNA ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
We present the results of a paleoparasitologic, paleogenetic and paleobotanic analysis of coprolites recovered during the excavation of the church La Concepción in Santa Cruz de Tenerife. Coprolites (n = 4) were rehydrated and a multidisciplinary analysis was conducted. The paleobotanic analysis showed numerous silicates, seeds and fruits of the family Moraceae. In the paleoparasitologic study, Ascaris sp. eggs (n = 344) were identified. The paleogenetic results confirmed the Ascaris sp. infection as well as the European origin of human remains. These findings contribute to our knowledge of ancient helminthes infections and are the first paleoparasitological record of Ascaris sp. infection in Spain.
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- 2010
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22. Paleoparasitology and the antiquity of human host-parasite relationships
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Adauto Araújo and Luiz Fernando Ferreira
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paleoparasitology ,coprolites ,mummies ,parasitism ,infectious diseases ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Paleoparasitology may be developed as a new tool to parasite evolution studies. DNA sequences dated thousand years ago, recovered from archaeological material, means the possibility to study parasite-host relationship coevolution through time. Together with tracing parasite-host dispersion throughout the continents, paleoparasitology points to the interesting field of evolution at the molecular level. In this paper a brief history of paleoparasitology is traced, pointing to the new perspectives opened by the recent techniques introduced.
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- 2000
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23. New finding of Giardia intestinalis (Eukaryote, Metamonad) in Old World archaeological site using immunofluorescence and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays
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Matthieu Le Bailly, Marcelo LC Gonçalves, Stéphanie Harter-Lailheugue, Frédéric Prodéo, Adauto Araujo, and Françoise Bouchet
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paleoparasitology ,ELISA ,IFA ,Giardia intestinalis ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
In this study, nine organic sediment samples from a medieval archaeological site at Pineuilh, France, were examined for Giardia intestinalis using two commercially available immunological kits [enzyme-linked immuno sorbent and immunofluorescence (IFA) assays]. Both techniques detected G. intestinalis in one sample, dated to 1,000 Anno Domini. This is the first time IFA was successfully used to detect protozoa in Old World archaeological samples. Such immunological techniques offer important perspectives concerning ancient protozoa detection and identification.
- Published
- 2008
24. Toxocara canis (Werner, 1782) eggs in the Pleistocene site of Menez-Dregan, France (300,000-500,000 years before present)
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Françoise Bouchet, Adauto Araújo, Stephanie Harter, Sérgio Miranda Chaves, Antonio Nascimento Duarte, Jean Laurent Monnier, and Luiz Fernando Ferreira
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paleoparasitology ,ancient parasitism ,parasite fossil record ,Toxocara canis ,paleofauna ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
On the archaeological site of Menez-Dregan in Brittany, France, dated 300,000-500,000 years-old, paleoparasitological analysis of cave deposits led to the detection of well-preserved helminth eggs, which morphology and morphometry pointed to the diagnosis of Toxocara canis eggs, a parasite of carnivore mammals. Paleolithic remains suggested a parasitism of the hyena Crocuta spelaea or other canids that inhabited the region.
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- 2003
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25. First paleoparasitological study of an embalming rejects jar found in Saqqara, Egypt
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Stéphanie Harter, Matthieu Le Bailly, Francis Janot, and Françoise Bouchet
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paleoparasitology ,ancient helminths ,embalming ,mummies ,Egypt ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
For the first time, a jar of embalming rejects was studied in search for helminth parasite eggs. This kind of jar was used to put discarded material by Egyptian embalmers during mummification process. Ascaris lumbricoides and Tænia saginata eggs were found in the linen and strip fragment contents of the jar, dated of 2,715-2,656 years ago.
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- 2003
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26. The presence of Fasciola hepatica (Liver-fluke) in humans and cattle from a 4,500 Year old archaeological site in the Saale-Unstrut Valley, Germany
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K Dittmar and WR Teegen
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paleoparasitology ,Fasciola hepatica ,human ,cattle ,late Neolithic ,Germany ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
During an excavation of a site of the corded ware culture in the Saale-Unstrut-Valley (ca. 3000 BC) in Germany, a soil sample from the pelvis of a human skeleton was studied under palaeoparasitological aspects. Eggs of the trematode Fasciola hepatica and of the nematode genus Capillaria were found. This is the first case of a direct association of a F. hepatica-infestation to both a prehistoric human skeleton and domesticated animal remains. Sheep and cattle bones were present at the same site and F. hepatica eggs were found in bovine samples. This strongly points toward an existing infection cycle, involving humans as a final host.
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- 2003
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27. Opisthorchiasis in infant remains from the medieval Zeleniy Yar burial ground of XII-XIII centuries AD
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Sergey Mikhailovich Slepchenko, Alexander Vasilevich Gusev, Sergey Nikolaevich Ivanov, and Evgenia Olegovna Svyatova
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Opisthorchis felineus ,paleoparasitology ,paleopathology ,Western Siberia ,health status ,food processing ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
We present a paleoparasitological analysis of the medieval Zeleniy Yar burial ground of the XII-XII centuries AD located in the northern part of Western Siberia. Parasite eggs, identified as eggs of Opisthorchis felineus, were found in the samples from the pelvic area of a one year old infant buried at the site. Presence of these eggs in the soil samples from the infant’s abdomen suggests that he/she was infected with opisthorchiasis and imply consumption of undercooked fish. Ethnographic records collected among the population of the northern part of Western Siberia reveal numerous cases of feeding raw fish to their children. Zeleniy Yar case of opisthorchiasis suggests that this dietary custom has persisted from at least medieval times.
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- 2015
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28. Trichuris sp. from 1,040 +/- 50-year-old Cervidae coprolites from the archaeological site Furna do Estrago, Pernambuco, Brazil
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Luciana Sianto, Antônio Nascimento Duarte, Marcia Chame, Juliana Magalhães, Mônica Vieira de Souza, Luiz Fernando Ferreira, and Adauto Araújo
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Cervidae ,coprolites ,paleoparasitology ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
We present results of the paleoparasitological analysis of Cervidae coprolites that were recovered from the archaeological site Furna do Estrago, Pernambuco, Brazil. Trichuris sp. eggs were recovered from the coprolite samples dated 1,040 ± 50 years before present. This is the first record of Trichuris sp. in semiarid Cervidae, unexpectedly recorded in archaeological material.
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- 2012
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29. Climatic change in northeastern Brazil: paleoparasitological data
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Adauto Araujo, Adriana Rangel, and Luiz Fernando Rocha Ferreira
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Trichuris ,paleoparasitology ,coprolites ,paleobiology ,parasite ecology ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Trichuris eggs were observed in Kerodon rupestris coprolites dated 9,000 years before present, collected in archeological sites of São Raimundo Nonato, northeastern Brazil. However, present day local rodents seem not to be infected by the parasite, suggesting its disappearence due to climatic changes.
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- 1993
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30. Capillaria spp. eggs in Patagonian archaeological sites: statistical analysis of morphometric data
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Martín H Fugassa, Verónica Taglioretti, Marcelo LC Gonçalves, Adauto Araújo, Norma H Sardella, and Guillermo M Denegri
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paleoparasitology ,coprolites ,Capillaria ,discriminant analysis ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Discriminant analysis was used to identify eggs of Capillaria spp. at specific level found in organic remains from an archaeological site in Patagonia, Argentina, dated of 6,540 ± 110 years before present. In order to distinguish eggshell morphology 149 eggs were measured and grouped into four arbitrary subsets. The analysis used on egg width and length discriminated them into different morphotypes (Wilks' lambda = 0.381, p < 0.05). The correlation analysis suggests that width was the most important variable to discriminate among the Capillaria spp. egg morphotypes (Pearson coefficient = 0.950, p < 0.05). The study of eggshell patterns, the relative frequency in the sample, and the morphometric data allowed us to correlate the four morphotypes with Capillaria species.
- Published
- 2008
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31. Strongyloides ferreirai Rodrigues, Vicente & Gomes, 1985 (Nematoda, Rhabdiasoidea) in rodent coprolites (8.000-2.000 years BP), from archaeological sites from Piauí, Brazil Strongyloides ferreirai Rodrigues, Vicente & Gomes, 1985 (Nematoda, Rhabdiasoidea) em coprólitos de roedores (8.000-2.000 anos AP= Antes do Presente), de sítios arqueológicos do Piauí, Brasil
- Author
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Adauto Araújo, Luiz Fernando Ferreira, Ulisses Confalonieri, Marcia Chame, and Benjamim Ribeiro
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coprólitos ,parasitos em material arqueológico ,paleoparasitologia ,Kerodon rupestris (Wied.) ,coprolites ,parasites in archaelogical material ,paleoparasitology ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Eggs and larvae of Strongyloides ferreirai Rodrigues, Vicente & Gomes, 1985 are identified in Kerodon rupestris (Wied.) coprolites dated from 8.000-2.000 years BP (Before Present), collected from archaeological sites from the northeast of Brazil.Ovos e larvas de Strongyloides ferreirai Rodrigues, Vicente & Gomes, 1985 foram identificados em coprólitos de Kerodon rupestris (Wied.), datados de 8.000 a 2.000 anos AP, coletados em sítios arqueológicos do nordeste do Brasil.
- Published
- 1989
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32. Acanthocefalan eggs in animal coprolites from archaeological sites from Brazil Ovos de acantocéfalo em coprólitos de animais em sítios arqueológicos do Brasil
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Luiz Fernando Ferreira, Adauto Araújo, Ulisses Confalonieri, and Marcia Chame
- Subjects
paleoparasitologia ,coprólitos de animais ,ovos de acantocéfalo em coprólitos ,Paleoparasitology ,animal coprolites ,acanthocephalan eggs in coproltes ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
An important point in paleoparasitology is the correct diagnosis of the origin of coprolites found in archaelogical sites. The identification of human and animal coprolites, through the study of the shape, size, charactheristics after rehydration, alimentary contents, and the presence of parasites, has proved to be accurate for human coprolites. For non-human ones we compared coprolites with recent faeces of animals collected near the archaeological sites, following the methodology above mentioned. In this paper anteaters coprolites (Tamandua tetradactyla; Mymecophaga tridactyla) with eggs of Gigantorhynchus echinodiscus (Archiancanthocephala; Gigantorynchidae) were identified.Uma questão central em paleoparasitologia é o diagnóstico correto da origem dos coprólitos encontrados em sítios arqueológicos. A separação entre coprólitos humanos e animais, através do estudo do tamanho, forma, características após a reidratação, conteúdo alimentar e a presença de parasitos, tem sido usada principalmente nos casos de material de origem humana. Em relação aos coprólitos de animais, um método que provou ser eficiente é a comparação de coprólitos com fezes recentes de animais da região dos sítios arqueológicos, seguindo-se os parâmetros mencionados anteriormente. Este trabalho refere-se ao diagnóstico de coprólitos de tamanduá (Tamandua tetradactyla; Mymercophaga tridactyla) com a presença de ovos de Gigantorynchus echinodiscus (Archiancanthocephala; Gigantorynchidae).
- Published
- 1989
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33. Retrieving ascarid and taeniid eggs from the biological remains of a Neolithic dog from the late 9th millennium BC in Western Iran
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Niloofar Paknezhad, Farbod Haji Mazdarani, Morteza Hessari, Iraj Mobedi, Faezeh Najafi, Negar Bizhani, Mahsasadat Makki, Gholamreza Hassanpour, and Gholamreza Mowlavi
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paleoparasitology ,Neolithic time ,dog ,ascarid and taeniid eggs ,Iran ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
BACKGROUND Paleoparasitology reveals the status of parasitic infections in humans and animals in ancient times based on parasitic particles found in biological remains from archaeological excavations. This line of research emerged in Iran in 2013. OBJECTIVE The identification of parasites from Neolithic times is an attractive subject that shows the oldest origins of parasitic infections in a given geographical region. From an archaeological point of view, this archaeological site is well-known for animal domestication and agriculture in ancient Iran. METHODS In this study, soil deposited on the surface and in the pores of a dog pelvic bone was carefully collected and rehydrated using trisodium phosphate solution. FINDINGS The results showed ascarid and taeniid eggs retrieved from the biological remains of a dog excavated at the East Chia Sabz archaeological site, which dates back to the Neolithic period (8100 BC). MAIN CONCLUSION The current findings clearly illustrate the natural circulation of nematode and cestode parasites among dogs at that time. These ancient helminth eggs can also be used to track the oldest parasitic infections in the Iranian plateau and contribute to the paleoparasitological documentation of the Fertile Crescent.
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34. Taenia sp. in human burial from Kan River, East Siberia
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Sergey Mikhailovich Slepchenko, Sergey Nikolaevich Ivanov, Anton Vasilevich Vybornov, Tsybankov Alexander Alekseevich, Slavinsky Vyacheslav Sergeyevich, Danil Nikolaevich Lysenko, and Vyacheslav Evgenievich Matveev
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Taenia sp ,archaeoparasitology ,paleoparasitology ,East Siberia ,Bronze Age ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
We present an arhaeoparasitological analysis of a unique burial from the Neftprovod II burial ground in East Siberia, which dated from the Bronze Age. Analysis of a sediment sample from the sacral region of the pelvis revealed the presence of Taenia sp. eggs. Because uncooked animal tissue is the primary source of Taenia, this indicated that the individual was likely consuming raw or undercooked meat of roe deer, red deer, or elk infected with Taenia. This finding represents the oldest case of a human infected with Taenia sp. from Eastern Siberia and Russia.
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