284 results on '"Mansonelliasis"'
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2. Development of a New Rapid Diagnostic Test to Support Onchocerciasis Elimination (Obi1)
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- 2024
3. Filling Key Research Gaps With Clinical Implications in Mansonellosis and Schistosomiasis: a Network Approach
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- 2024
4. Doxycycline to Treat Mansonella Perstans Infection in Patients With and Without Lymphatic Filariasis
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Amy Klion, M.D./National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
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- 2017
5. Concomitant Infections of Mansonella Perstans in Tuberculosis and Buruli Ulcer Disease Patients From Ghana (Map2Co)
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University of Bonn, Heinrich-Heine University, Duesseldorf, and Dr Richard Phillips, Dr
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- 2017
6. High Prevalence of Mansonella ozzardi Infection in the Amazon Region, Ecuador
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Manuel Calvopina, Carlos Chiluisa-Guacho, Alberto Toapanta, David Fonseca, and Irina Villacres
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Mansonella ozzardi ,mansonelliasis ,parasites ,infection ,filariasis ,prevalence ,Medicine ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
We reviewed Giemsa-stained thick blood smears, obtained through the national malaria surveillance program in the Amazon region of Ecuador, by light microscopy for Mansonella spp. microfilariae. Of 2,756 slides examined, 566 (20.5%) were positive. Nested PCR confirmed that the microfilariae were those of M. ozzardi nematodes, indicating that this parasite is endemic to this region.
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- 2019
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7. Inflammatory and regulatory CCL and CXCL chemokine and cytokine cellular responses in patients with patent Mansonella perstans filariasis.
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Wangala, B., Gantin, R.G., Voßberg, P. S., Vovor, A., Poutouli, W.P., Komlan, K., Banla, M., Köhler, C., and Soboslay, P.T.
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CXCR4 receptors , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *BACTERIAL antigens - Abstract
Summary: Mansonella perstans (Mp) filariasis is present in large populations in sub‐Saharan Africa, and to what extent patent Mp infection modulates the expression of immunity in patients, notably their cellular cytokine and chemokine response profile, remains not well known. We studied the spontaneous and inducible cellular production of chemokines (C‐X‐C motif) ligand 9 (CXCL9) [monokine induced by interferon (IFN)‐γ (MIG)], CXCL‐10 [inducible protein (IP)‐10], chemokine (C‐C motif) ligand 24 (CCL24) (eotaxin‐2), CCL22 [macrophage‐derived chemokine (MDC)], CCL13 [monocyte chemotactic protein‐4 (MCP‐4)], CCL18 [pulmonary and activation‐regulated chemokine (PARC)], CCL17 [thymus‐ and activation‐regulated chemokine (TARC)] and interleukin (IL)‐27 in mansonelliasis patients (Mp‐PAT) and mansonelliasis‐free controls (CTRL). Freshly isolated peripheral mononuclear blood cells (PBMC) were stimulated with helminth, protozoan and bacterial antigens and mitogen [phytohaemagglutinin (PHA)]. PBMC from Mp‐PAT produced spontaneously (without antigen stimulation) significantly higher levels of eotaxin‐2, IL‐27, IL‐8, MCP‐4 and MDC than cells from CTRL, while IFN‐γ‐IP‐10 was lower in Mp‐PAT. Helminth antigens activated IL‐27 and MCP‐4 only in CTRL, while Ascaris antigen, Onchocerca antigen, Schistosoma antigen, Entamoeba antigen, Streptococcus antigen, Mycobacteria antigen and PHA stimulated MIG release in CTRL and Mp‐PAT. Notably, Entamoeba antigen and PHA strongly depressed (P < 0·0001) eotaxin‐2 (CCL24) production in both study groups. Multiple regression analyses disclosed in Mp‐PAT and CTRL dissimilar cellular chemokine and cytokine production levels being higher in Mp‐PAT for CCL24, IL‐27, IL‐8, MCP‐4, MDC and PARC (for all P < 0·0001), at baseline (P < 0·0001), in response to Entamoeba histolytica strain HM1 antigen (EhAg) (P < 0·0001), Onchocerca volvulus adult worm‐derived antigen (OvAg) (P = 0·005), PHA (P < 0·0001) and purified protein derivative (PPD) (P < 0·0001) stimulation. In Mp‐PAT with hookworm co‐infection, the cellular chemokine production of CXCL10 (IP‐10) was diminished. In summary, the chemokine and cytokine responses in Mp‐PAT were in general not depressed, PBMC from Mp‐PAT produced spontaneously and selectively inducible inflammatory and regulatory chemokines and cytokines at higher levels than CTRL and such diverse and distinctive reactivity supports that patent M. perstans infection will not polarize innate and adaptive cellular immune responsiveness in patients. To what extent patent Mansonella perstans filariasis may influence or bias cellular reactivity and the immune response profile in mansonelliasis patients (Mp‐PAT) was investigated. The chemokine and cytokine responses in Mp‐PAT were in general not depressed, peripheral mononuclear blood cells from Mp‐PAT produced spontaneously and selectively inducible inflammatory and regulatory chemokines and cytokines at higher levels than filariasis‐free controls (CTRL) and such diverse and distinctive reactivity supports that patent M. perstans infection will not polarize innate and adaptive cellular immune responsiveness in patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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8. Epidemiology and Control of Mansonella Perstans Infection in Uganda
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Ministry of Health, Uganda
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- 2007
9. Occurrence of Mansonella ozzardi diagnosed using a polycarbonate membrane in a riverside population of Lábrea in the Western Brazilian Amazon
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Sergio de Almeida Basano, Jansen Fernandes Medeiros, Gilberto Fontes, Gabriel de Deus Vieira, Juliana Souza de Almeida Aranha Camargo, Luana Janaína Souza Vera, Ricardo de Godoi Mattos Ferreira, and Luís Marcelo Aranha Camargo
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Mansonelliasis ,Mansonella ozzardi ,Brazilian Amazon ,Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 - Abstract
Abstract: INTRODUCTION Mansonella ozzardi is a widely distributed filaria worm in the Amazon region. This study aimed to determine the prevalence of M. ozzardi infection in riverine communities of Lábrea municipality, Amazonas State, Brazil. METHODS A diagnostic blood filtration method in a polycarbonate membrane was used. RESULTS M. ozzardi was found in 50.3% of the sample, with the highest prevalence in farmers/fishermen (69.4%; χ 2 = -19.14, p
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- 2016
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10. A field trial of a PCR-based Mansonella ozzardi diagnosis assay detects high-levels of submicroscopic M. ozzardi infections in both venous blood samples and FTA® card dried blood spots
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Jansen Fernandes Medeiros, Tatiana Amaral Pires Almeida, Lucyane Bastos Tavares Silva, Jose Miguel Rubio, James Lee Crainey, Felipe Arley Costa Pessoa, and Sergio Luiz Bessa Luz
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Mansonelliasis ,Mansonella ozzardi ,PCR-detection ,Submicroscopic ,FTA®cards ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Background Mansonella ozzardi is a poorly understood human filarial parasite with a broad distribution throughout Latin America. Most of what is known about its parasitism has come from epidemiological studies that have estimated parasite incidence using light microscopy. Light microscopy can, however, miss lighter, submicroscopic, infections. In this study we have compared M. ozzardi incidence estimates made using light microscopy, with estimates made using PCR. Methods 214 DNA extracts made from Large Volume Venous Blood Samples (LVVBS) were taken from volunteers from two study sites in the Rio Solimões region: Codajás [n = 109] and Tefé [n = 105] and were subsequently assayed for M. ozzardi parasitism using a diagnostic PCR (Mo-dPCR). Peripheral finger-prick blood samples were taken from the same individuals and used for microscopic examination. Finger-prick blood, taken from individuals from Tefé, was also used for the creation of FTA®card dried blood spots (DBS) that were subsequently subjected to Mo-dPCR. Results Overall M. ozzardi incidence estimates made with LVVBS PCRs were 1.8 times higher than those made using microscopy (44.9 % [96/214] compared with 24.3 % [52/214]) and 1.5 times higher than the PCR estimates made from FTA®card DBS (48/105 versus 31/105). PCR-based detection of FTA®card DBS proved 1.3 times more sensitive at diagnosing infections from peripheral blood samples than light microscopy did: detecting 24/105 compared with 31/105. PCR of LVVBS reported the fewest number of false negatives, detecting: 44 of 52 (84.6 %) individuals diagnosed by microscopy; 27 of 31 (87.1 %) of those diagnosed positive from DBSs and 17 out of 18 (94.4 %) of those diagnosed as positive by both alternative methodologies. Conclusions In this study, Mo-dPCR of LVVBS was by far the most sensitive method of detecting M. ozzardi infections and detected submicroscopic infections. Mo-dPCR FTA®card DBS also provided a more sensitive test for M. ozzardi diagnosis than light microscopy based diagnosis did and thus in settings where only finger-prick assays can be carried-out, it may be a more reliable method of detection. Most existing M. ozzardi incidence estimates, which are often based on light microscope diagnosis, are likely to dramatically underestimate true M. ozzardi parasitism incidence levels.
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- 2015
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11. Mise à jour des connaissances concernant quatre maladies délaissées en Haïti : mansonellose, tungose, lèpre, charbon.
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Raccurt, C. P., Boncy, J., Jean-Baptiste, R. M. A., Honoré, R., Andrecy, L. L., Dély, P., Mondésir, L., Chatelier, M., Existe, A., and Adrien, P.
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- 2018
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12. Prevalence, probability, and characteristics of malaria and filariasis co-infections: A systematic review and meta-analysis
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Polrat Wilairatana, Kwuntida Uthaisar Kotepui, Wanida Mala, Kinley Wangdi, and Manas Kotepui
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Coinfection ,Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha ,Interleukin-6 ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Complement C4 ,Interleukin-10 ,Filariasis ,Malaria ,Infectious Diseases ,Prevalence ,Mansonelliasis ,Animals ,Humans ,Interleukin-4 ,Chemokines ,Probability - Abstract
Background Malaria and filariasis are significant vector-borne diseases that are co-endemic in the same human populations. This study aims to collate the evidence, probability, and characteristics of malaria and filariasis co-infections in participants among studies reporting the co-occurrence of both diseases. Methods We searched for potentially relevant articles reporting the co-occurrence of malaria and filariasis in five electronic databases (Embase, PubMed, Scopus, Medline, and CENTRAL) from inception to May 22, 2022. We estimated the pooled prevalence and probability of malaria and filariasis co-infections among study participants using random-effects meta-analyses and synthesized the characteristics of patients with co-infections narratively. Results We identified 951 articles, 24 of which (96,838 participants) met eligibility criteria and were included in the systematic review. Results of the meta-analysis showed a pooled prevalence of malaria and filariasis co-infections among participants of 11%. The prevalence of co-infections was 2.3% in Africa, 0.2% in Asia, and 1.6% in South America. The pooled prevalences of malaria and Wuchereria bancrofti, malaria and Loa loa, malaria and Mansonella perstans co-infections were 0.7%, 1.2%, and 1.0%, respectively. The meta-analysis results showed that the co-infections between two parasites occurred by probability (P = 0.001). Patients with co-infections were at increased risk of having an enlarged spleen, a lower rate of severe anemia, lower parasite density, and more asymptomatic clinical status. Patients with co-infections had decreased levels of C-X-C motif chemokine 5, tumor necrosis factor–α, interleukin-4, c4 complement, and interleukin-10. In addition, patients with co-infections had a lower interleukin-10/tumor necrosis factor–α ratio and higher interleukin-10/interleukin-6 ratio. Conclusion The present study showed that the prevalence of malaria and filariasis co-infections was low and varied between geographical areas in the selected articles. Co-infections tended to occur with a low probability. Further studies investigating the outcomes and characteristics of co-infections are needed.
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- 2022
13. Comparison of three PCR-based methods to detect Loa loa and Mansonella perstans in long-term frozen storage dried blood spots
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María Romay-Barja, Thuy-Huong Ta-Tang, Pedro Fernández-Soto, Antonio Muro, Zaida Herrador, Begoña Febrer-Sendra, Agustín Benito, José M. Rubio, Pedro Berzosa, Diego Agudo, and Policarpo Ncogo
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Veterinary medicine ,biology ,Spots ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Mansonella ,biology.organism_classification ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Loa ,Infectious Diseases ,Loiasis ,parasitic diseases ,Mansonelliasis ,Animals ,Humans ,Mansonella perstans ,Parasitology ,Frozen storage ,Dried blood ,Loa loa - Abstract
Background: Loa loa and Mansonella perstans are two filarial species very common in Africa, with overlapping geographic distribution in some areas. Microscopy is the traditional diagnostic method for human loiasis and mansonellosis, but is a time-consuming, labor intensive and tedious. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) methods have emerged as an alternative approach for identification of filarial parasites. Dried blood spot (DBS) has been reported as a convenient way to keep DNA for epidemiological investigations and diagnosis of infectious diseases, and does not require venipuncture. The finding of a highly sensitive DNA extraction method for filarial nematodes is also required for a good molecular performance. The aim of this study was to compare three different molecular methods to diagnose human loiasis and mansonellosis using DBS as a medium of sample collection and storage. The saponin/Chelex method for extracting filarial DNA was also applied. Methods: A total of 100 clinical samples were randomly selected for this study. Microscopy was used as the reference method for diagnosing and calculating the microfilaraemia. Filarial DNA was extracted using saponin/Chelex method from DBS. DNA isolated was assayed by three different molecular methods: qPCR, Filaria-Nested PCR, and cytochrome oxidase I PCR. All PCR-products were subsequently purified and sequenced. Statistical values for each molecular test were computed and compared.Results: Overall, 64 samples were identified as negative by all the tests and 36 samples were positive by at least one of the methods tested. Microscopy detected 27 positive samples, meanwhile qPCR, Filaria-Nested PCR and COI PCR detected 30, 31 and 33 positive samples, respectively. The best overall results were obtained with COI PCR protocol (sensitivity 92.6%; specificity 89.0%; kappa index 76.3%). Conclusions: Despite the good statistical values obtained for COI PCR, this method needs the sequencing of the fragment obtained to identify the filarial species; thus the optimal technique to diagnose filarial infection was qPCR, it was very similar in terms of sensitivity and specificity compared to microscopy and for its capacity to detect a wide range of human filariae. It is an appropriate method for filarial diagnosis in non-endemic settings.
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- 2022
14. Mansonella ozzardi in the municipality of Tefé, Amazonas, Brazil, 60 years after the first report: an epidemiologic study
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Jansen Fernandes Medeiros, Moreno Souza Rodrigues, Tony Hiroshi Katsuragawa, Cristóvão Alves Costa, and Felipe Arley Costa Pessoa
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filariasis ,mansonelliasis ,Mansonella ozzardi ,Amazonia ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
The prevalence of mansonelliasis was studied in the municipality of Tefé, state of Amazonas, Brazil. The prevalence (thick blood smear method) was 13.6% (147/1,078), higher in the Solimões River region (16.3%) than in the Tefé River region (6.3%). In the sampled communities in the Solimões River region, a higher density of cases was observed, as indicated by a kernel analysis (odds ratio 0.34; 95% confidence interval: 0.20-0.57). Males had a higher prevalence (χ2 = 31.292, p < 0.001) than women. Mansonella ozzardi prevalence was higher in retirees and farmers (28.9% and 27%, respectively). Prevalence also significantly increased with age (χ2 = -128.17, p < 0.001), with the highest numbers occurring in persons older than 67 years.
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- 2014
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15. A large case series of travel-related Mansonella perstans (vector-borne filarial nematode): a TropNet study in Europe
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Francesca Tamarozzi, Paola Rodari, Joaquín Salas-Coronas, Emmanuel Bottieau, Fernando Salvador, Manuel Jesús Soriano-Pérez, María Isabel Cabeza-Barrera, Marjan Van Esbroeck, Begoña Treviño, Dora Buonfrate, Federico G Gobbi, Institut Català de la Salut, [Tamarozzi F, Rodari P] Department of Infectious-Tropical Diseases and Microbiology, IRCCS Sacro Cuore Don Calabria Hospital, Negrar di Valpolicella, Verona, Italy. [Salas-Coronas J, Soriano-Pérez MJ] Tropical Medicine Unit, Hospital de Poniente, El Ejido, Almería, Spain. [Bottieau E] Department of Clinical Sciences, Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium. [Salvador F, Treviño B] Unitat de Medicina Tropical i Salut Internacional Drassanes-Vall d'Hebron Hospital Universitari, Barcelona, Spain. Servei de Malalties Infeccioses, Vall d’Hebron Hospital Universitari, Barcelona, Spain. PROSICS Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain, and Vall d'Hebron Barcelona Hospital Campus
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Nematodes ,Otros calificadores::Otros calificadores::/farmacoterapia [Otros calificadores] ,Pathological Conditions, Signs and Symptoms::Signs and Symptoms::Travel-Related Illness [DISEASES] ,Other subheadings::Other subheadings::/drug therapy [Other subheadings] ,Parasitic Diseases::Helminthiasis::Nematode Infections::Secernentea Infections::Spirurida Infections::Filariasis::Mansonelliasis [DISEASES] ,follow-up ,Mansonelliasis ,Animals ,Humans ,Malalties transmissibles ,Prospective Studies ,Other subheadings::/therapeutic use [Other subheadings] ,clinical characteristics ,Retrospective Studies ,Malalties parasitàries - Tractament ,Travel ,treatment ,Otros calificadores::/uso terapéutico [Otros calificadores] ,General Medicine ,Mansonella ,Mansonella perstans ,Chemical Actions and Uses::Pharmacologic Actions::Therapeutic Uses::Anti-Infective Agents::Antiparasitic Agents [CHEMICALS AND DRUGS] ,Mebendazole ,acciones y usos químicos::acciones farmacológicas::usos terapéuticos::antiinfecciosos::antiparasitarios [COMPUESTOS QUÍMICOS Y DROGAS] ,enfermedades parasitarias::helmintiasis::infecciones por nematodos::infecciones por Secernentea::infecciones por Spirurida::filariasis::mansoneliasis [ENFERMEDADES] ,Agents antiparasitaris - Ús terapèutic ,Travel-Related Illness ,Wolbachia ,afecciones patológicas, signos y síntomas::signos y síntomas::enfermedades relacionadas con los viajes [ENFERMEDADES] - Abstract
Background Infection with Mansonella perstans is a neglected filariasis, widely distributed in sub-Saharan Africa, characterized by an elusive clinical picture; treatment for mansonellosis is not standardized. This retrospective study aimed to describe the clinical features, treatment schemes and evolution, of a large cohort of imported cases of M. perstans infection seen in four European centres for tropical diseases. Methods Mansonella perstans infections, diagnosed by identification of blood microfilariae in migrants, expatriates and travellers, collected between 1994 and 2018, were retrospectively analysed. Data concerning demographics, clinical history and laboratory examinations at diagnosis and at follow-up time points were retrieved. Results A total of 392 patients were included in the study. Of the 281 patients for whom information on symptoms could be retrieved, 150 (53.4%) reported symptoms, abdominal pain and itching being the most frequent. Positive serology and eosinophilia were present in 84.4% and 66.1%, respectively, of those patients for whom these data were available. Concomitant parasitic infections were reported in 23.5% of patients. Treatment, administered to 325 patients (82.9%), was extremely heterogeneous between and within centres; the most commonly used regimen was mebendazole 100 mg twice a day for 1 month. A total of 256 (65.3%) patients attended a first follow-up, median 3 months (interquartile range 2–12) after the first visit; 83.1% of patients having received treatment based on mebendazole and/or doxycycline, targeting Wolbachia, became amicrofilaremic, 41.1–78.4% of whom within 12 months from single treatment. Conclusions Lack of specific symptoms, together with the inconstant positivity of parasitological and antibody-based assays in the infected population, makes the clinical suspicion and screening for mansonellosis particularly difficult. Prospective studies evaluating prevalence of infection in migrants from endemic areas, infection-specific morbidity, presence of Wolbachia endosymbionts in M. perstans populations from different geographical areas and efficacy of treatment regimens are absolutely needed to optimize the clinical management of infection.
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- 2022
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16. Pulmonary localization of Mansonella perstans in a 16 months-old male patient in a tertiary care hospital in Bukavu, Democratic Republic of Congo.
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Kabego, Landry, Kasengi, Joe Bwija, Mirindi, Patrick, Ruhanya, Vurayai, Lupande, David, Bulabula, André, and Ngoma, Patrick
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TREATMENT of filariasis , *CERATOPOGONIDAE , *PUBLIC health - Abstract
Introduction Mansonella perstans is a human filarial parasite transmitted by biting midges (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae) belonging to the genus Culicoides and it is widely spread in sub-Saharan Africa. While most cases are asymptomatic, mansonelliasis can be associated with angioedema, arthralgia, swellings, pain in the scrotum or in serous cavities such as the pleura, the peritoneum, the pericardium, etc. Mansonelliasis can be really hard to treat, but it has been shown that an intensive treatment using albendazole can clear the parasite. Case report Here we describe a case of a 16 months-old malnourished child with pneumonia due to M. perstans in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo. Conclusion Although our investigations confirmed M. perstans infection, this case shows that it is very difficult to come to a conclusive diagnosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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17. High Prevalence of Mansonella ozzardi Infection in the Amazon Region, Ecuador.
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Calvopina, Manuel, Chiluisa-Guacho, Carlos, Toapanta, Alberto, Fonseca, David, and Villacres, Irina
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MICROSCOPY , *DISEASE prevalence , *INFECTION , *NEMATODES , *MALARIA - Abstract
We reviewed Giemsa-stained thick blood smears, obtained through the national malaria surveillance program in the Amazon region of Ecuador, by light microscopy for Mansonella spp. microfilariae. Of 2,756 slides examined, 566 (20.5%) were positive. Nested PCR confirmed that the microfilariae were those of M. ozzardi nematodes, indicating that this parasite is endemic to this region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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18. Molecular Epidemiology of Mansonella Species in Gabon
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Thaisa Lucas Sandri, Miriam Rodi, Benjamin Mordmüller, Andrea Kreidenweiss, Simon Cavallo, Markus Gmeiner, Pierre Blaise Matsiegui, Michael Ramharter, Tamirat Gebru Woldearegai, Gildas B Tazemda-Kuitsouc, David Weber, Sascha Juhas, Luzia Veletzky, and Jana Held
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Male ,Rural Population ,0301 basic medicine ,food.ingredient ,030231 tropical medicine ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Loa ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,food ,Mansonelliasis ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy ,Mansonella perstans ,Gabon ,Molecular Epidemiology ,biology ,Molecular epidemiology ,Mansonella ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,030104 developmental biology ,Infectious Diseases ,Nematode ,Carrier State ,Coinfection ,Wolbachia ,Mansonella species ,Loa loa - Abstract
Mansonella perstans, a filarial nematode, infects large populations in Africa and Latin America. Recently, a potential new species, Mansonella sp “DEUX,” was reported. Carriage of endosymbiotic Wolbachia opens treatment options for Mansonella infections. Within a cross-sectional study, we assessed the prevalence of filarial infections in 834 Gabonese individuals and the presence of the endosymbiont Wolbachia. Almost half of the participants (400/834 [48%]) were infected with filarial nematodes, with Mansonella sp “DEUX” being the most frequent (295/400 [74%]), followed by Loa loa (273/400 [68%]) and Mansonella perstans (82/400 [21%]). Being adult/elderly, male, and living in rural areas was associated with a higher risk of infection. Wolbachia carriage was confirmed in M. perstans and Mansonella sp “DEUX.” In silico analysis revealed that Mansonella sp “DEUX” is not detected with currently published M. perstans–specific assays. Mansonella infections are highly prevalent in Gabon and might have been underreported, likely also beyond Gabon.
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- 2020
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19. Prevalence of Mansonella ozzardi among riverine communities in the municipality of Lábrea, State of Amazonas, Brazil Prevalências de Mansonella ozzardi entre comunidades ribeirinhas do município de Lábrea, Estado do Amazonas
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Jansen Fernandes Medeiros, Victor Py-Daniel, and Ulysses Carvalho Barbosa
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Mansonelose ,Mansonella ozzardi ,Simuliidae ,Município de Lábrea ,Amazonas ,Mansonelliasis ,Municipality of Lábrea ,Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Estimate the prevalence of Mansonella ozzardi infection and calculate the parasitic infection rate (PIR) in simuliid black flies in the municipality of Lábrea, State of Amazonas, Brazil. METHODS: Prevalence was measured using the thick blood smear method collected from the fingers and was related to age, sex and occupation. Simuliidae were collected with a suction apparatus, then stained with hematoxylin and dissected to verify the PIR. RESULTS: The average prevalence rate of M. ozzardi among the 694 individuals examined was 20.7%. Infection was higher in men (27.6%) than in women (14.3%) (p < 0.001) and occurred in most age groups, with the highest prevalence in the following age groups: 38-47 (40%), 48-57 (53.1%) and >58 (60.5%). The highest prevalence rates were observed in the retired (64%), followed by farm workers (47.1%). Infection by M. ozzardi was only identified in Cerqueirellum amazonicum (Simuliidae) with a PIR of 0.6%. CONCLUSIONS: This study showed a high prevalence of M. ozzardi in the riverine communities of Lábrea due to the lack of policies regarding the treatment of microfilaremic individuals in the region and an abundance of competent vectors for M. ozzardi.INTRODUÇÃO: Estimar as prevalências de Mansonella ozzardi, e calcular a taxa de infecção parasitária nos simulídeos no município de Lábrea, Estado do Amazonas. MÉTODOS: As prevalências foram obtidas através do método de gota espessa a partir do sangue coletado da polpa digital e foram relacionadas com a idade, sexo e ocupação. Os simulídeos foram coletados com capturador de sucção, posteriormente foram corados com hematoxilina e dissecados para se obter a taxa de infecção parasitária. RESULTADOS: A prevalência de M. ozzardi entre as 694 pessoas examinadas foi de 20,7%. A infecção foi maior nos homens (27,6%) do que nas mulheres (14,3%) (p < 0,001) e ocorreu na maioria das faixas etárias com maiores prevalências nos indivíduos entre 38-47 (40%), 48-57 (53,1%) e >58 (60,5%) anos. As maiores prevalências foram observadas nos aposentados (64%) e agricultores (47,1%). Somente Cerqueirellum amazonicum (Simuliidae) foi encontrado infectado com M. ozzardi com uma taxa de infecção parasitária de 0,6%. CONCLUSÕES: Este trabalho mostra elevadas prevalências de M. ozzardi nas comunidades ribeirinhas de Lábrea devido à ausência de políticas de tratamento dos microfilarêmicos na região e a abundância de vetores competentes.
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- 2011
20. Mansonelliasis, a neglected parasitic disease in Haiti
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Christian Pierre Raccurt, Philippe Brasseur, and Jacques Boncy
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mansonelliasis ,Mansonella ozzardi ,Haiti ,neglected tropical disease ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Reported in Haiti as early as 1923, Mansonella ozzardi is still a neglected disease ignored by the health authorities of the country. This review is an update on the geographic distribution of the coastal foci of mansonelliasis in Haiti, the epidemiological profile and prevalence rates of microfilariae in people living in endemic areas, the clinical impact of the parasite on health and the efficiency of the transmission of the parasite among three Culicoides biting-midge species identified as vectors in Haiti. Additionally, interest in establishing a treatment programme to combat this parasite using a single dose of ivermectin is emphasised.
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- 2014
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21. Nested PCR to detect and distinguish the sympatric filarial species Onchocerca volvulus, Mansonella ozzardi and Mansonella perstans in the Amazon Region
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Thuy-Huong Ta Tang, Rogelio López-Vélez, Marta Lanza, Anthony John Shelley, Jose Miguel Rubio, and Sérgio Luiz Bessa Luz
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nested PCR ,18S rDNA ,ITS-1 ,onchocerciasis ,mansonelliasis ,Brazil ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
We present filaria-nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR), which is based on amplification of first internal transcribed spacer rDNA to distinguish three parasitic filarial species (Onchocerca volvulus, Mansonella ozzardiand Mansonella perstans) that can be found in the Amazon Region. Nested PCR-based identifications yielded the same results as those utilizing morphological characters. Nested PCR is highly sensitive and specific and it detects low-level infections in both humans and vectors. No cross-amplifications were observed with various other blood parasites and no false-positive results were obtained with the nested PCR. The method works efficiently with whole-blood, blood-spot and skin biopsy samples. Our method may thus be suitable for assessing the efficacy of filaria control programmes in Amazonia by recording parasite infections in both the human host and the vector. By specifically differentiating the major sympatric species of filaria, this technique could also enhance epidemiological research in the region.
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- 2010
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22. Mansonella ozzardi in Amazonas, Brazil: prevalence and distribution in the municipality of Coari, in the middle Solimões River
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Marilaine Martins, Felipe Arley Costa Pessoa, Maurício Borborema de Medeiros, Edmar Vaz de Andrade, and Jansen Fernandes Medeiros
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filariasis ,mansonelliasis ,black flies ,Amazonia ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
This study investigated some epidemiological aspects of the Mansonella ozzardi in municipality of Coari, Amazonas. Clinical symptoms were correlated with the filarial infection and the parasitic infection rates (PIR) were estimated in simuliid vectors. The general M. ozzardi human prevalence rate was 13.3% (231/1733), of which 10.2% (109/1069) were from the urban area and 18.4% (122/664) from the rural area. The prevalence rates were higher in men (14.5% urban and 19.7% rural) than in women (6.7% urban and 17.2% rural) and occurred in most age groups. The indices of microfilaremics were higher in people > 51 years old (26.9% urban and 61.5% rural). High prevalence rates were observed in retired people (27.1% urban area), housewives and farmer (41.6% and 25%, respectively, in rural area). The main clinical symptoms were joint pains and sensation of leg coldness. Only Cerqueirellum argentiscutum (Simuliidae) transmits M. ozzardi in this municipality (PIR = 5.6% urban and 7.1% rural). M. ozzardi is a widely distributed parasitic disease in Coari. Thus, temporary residency in the region of people from other localities involved with the local gas exploitation might be a contributing factor in spreading the disease.
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- 2010
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23. Mansonella ozzardi in Brazil: prevalence of infection in riverine communities in the Purus region, in the state of Amazonas
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Jansen Fernandes Medeiros, Victor Py-Daniel, Ulysses Carvalho Barbosa, and Thiago Junqueira Izzo
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Mansonella ozzardi ,mansonelliasis ,simuliid vector ,Amazonas ,Brazil ,Cerqueirellum amazonicum ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
This study was undertaken to investigate the prevalence of Mansonella ozzardi infection and to estimate the parasitic infection rate (PIR) in simuliid black flies in the municipality of Pauini, Amazonas, Brazil. We used thick blood films to examine 921 individuals in 35 riverine communities along the Pauini and Purus Rivers. Simuliids were caught in several communities. Flies were identified, stained with haematoxylin and dissected. Overall, 44 (24.86%) of 177 riverines were infected in communities on the Pauini River and 183 (24.19%) of 744 on the Purus. The prevalence was higher in men (31.81% and 29.82%) than in women (17.98% and 19.18%) and occurred in most age groups. The prevalence increased sharply in the 28-37 (50% and 42.68%) age group and increased in the older age classes. The highest prevalence was in farmers (44% and 52.17%, respectively) in the Pauini and Purus Rivers. Only Cerqueirellum amazonicum (Simuliidae) transmits M. ozzardi in this municipality, and we found a PIR of 0-8.43% and infectivity rate of 0-3.61%. These results confirm that rates of M. ozzardi infection are high in Pauini and suggest that its prevalence may be far greater than has been previously reported due to the absence of a program for treating the population.
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- 2009
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24. Characterising co-infections with Plasmodium spp., Mansonella perstans or Loa loa in asymptomatic children, adults and elderly people living on Bioko Island using nucleic acids extracted from malaria rapid diagnostic tests
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Charlene Aya Yoboue, Salome Hosch, Olivier Tresor Donfack, Etienne A. Guirou, Bonifacio Manguire Nlavo, Mitoha Ondo’o Ayekaba, Carlos Guerra, Wonder P. Phiri, Guillermo A. Garcia, Tobias Schindler, and Claudia A. Daubenberger
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Adult ,Male ,Plasmodium ,Adolescent ,RC955-962 ,Loa ,Loiasis ,Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,parasitic diseases ,Mansonelliasis ,Prevalence ,Animals ,Humans ,Child ,Coinfection ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,DNA, Helminth ,Mansonella ,Middle Aged ,Malaria ,Infectious Diseases ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Equatorial Guinea ,Female ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
BackgroundRegular and comprehensive epidemiological surveys of the filarial nematodesMansonella perstansandLoa loain children, adolescents and adults living across Bioko Island, Equatorial Guinea are lacking. We aimed to demonstrate that blood retained on malaria rapid diagnostic tests, commonly deployed for malaria surveys, could be used as a source of nucleic acids for molecular based detection ofM.perstansandL.loa. We wanted to determine the positivity rate and distribution of filarial nematodes across different age groups and geographical areas as well as to understand level of co-infections with malaria in an asymptomatic population.MethodologyM.perstans,L.loaandPlasmodiumspp. parasites were monitored by qPCR in a cross-sectional study using DNA extracted from a subset malaria rapid diagnostic tests (mRDTs) collected during the annual malaria indicator survey conducted on Bioko Island in 2018.Principal findingsWe identified DNA specific for the two filarial nematodes investigated among 8.2% (263) of the 3214 RDTs screened. Positivity rates ofM.perstansandL.loawere 6.6% and 1.5%, respectively.M.perstansinfection were more prominent in male (10.5%) compared to female (3.9%) survey participants.M.perstansparasite density and positivity rate was higher among older people and the population living in rural areas. The socio-economic status of participants strongly influenced the infection rate with people belonging to the lowest socio-economic quintile more than 3 and 5 times more likely to beL.loaandM.perstansinfected, respectively. No increased risk of being co-infected withPlasmodiumspp. parasites was observed among the different age groups.Conclusions/SignificanceWe found otherwise asymptomatic individuals were infected withM.perstansandL.loa. Our study demonstrates that employing mRDTs probed with blood for malaria testing represents a promising, future tool to preserve and ship NAs at room temperature to laboratories for molecular, high-throughput diagnosis and genotyping of blood-dwelling nematode filarial infections. Using this approach, asymptomatic populations can be reached and surveyed for infectious diseases beyond malaria.
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- 2021
25. Epidemiological studies of Mansonella ozzardi (Nematoda, Onchocercidae) in indigenous communities of Pauini municipality, Amazonas, Brazil Estudos epidemiológicos da Mansonella ozzardi (Nematoda, Onchocercidae) em comunidades indígenas do município de Pauini, Amazonas, Brasil
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Jansen Fernandes Medeiros, Victor Py-Daniel, Ulysses Carvalho Barbosa, and Emanuelle de Souza Farias
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Mansonella ozzardi ,Mansonelose ,Simuliidae ,Amazonas ,Brasil ,Mansonelliasis ,Brazil ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 - Abstract
The Mansonella ozzardi has a widespread distribution among the indigenous and riverine communities of Amazonas, Brazil. We estimated the prevalence of Mansonella ozzardi in indigenous communities of the Pauini municipality, Amazonas state, Brazil and the rate of parasitic infection in vectors. We collected thick blood smears from individuals from six Apurinã indigenous communities along the Purus River and its tributaries. Collections of simuliids were made and dissected, and the larval instars of M. ozzardi identified. The overall prevalence of M. ozzardi was 28.40%, with the highest incidence among males and agricultural workers. Among age groups, children 2-9 years of age had the lowest incidence, while individuals older than 58 exhibited the highest rates of infection. We found infected simuliids in three communities, with Parasitic Infection Rates (PIR) of 0.34-6.58%. The prevalence of M. ozzardi among the Apurinã people is high, possibly related to the diary activities of the riparian people, where a high abundance of the vectors exists.Esse trabalho tem como objetivos estimar a prevalência de Mansonella ozzardi em comunidades indígenas do município de Pauini, Amazonas, Brasil e estimar a Taxa de Infecção Parasitária nos vetores. Foram examinados indígenas da etnia Apurinã, pelo método de gota espessa, em seis comunidades localizadas as margens e afluentes do rio Purus. A prevalência geral para M. ozzardi foi de 28,40%, com maior incidência para o sexo masculino e nos indivíduos com atividade no campo (agricultores). Em relação à faixa etária, as menores prevalências foram obtidas nos indivíduos mais jovens (2-9 anos), enquanto as maiores nos indivíduos acima de 58 anos. Foram encontrados simulídeos parasitados em três comunidades, com uma Taxa de Infecção Parasitária que variou de 0,34 a 6,58%. A prevalência de M. ozzardi entre os Apurinã é elevada, possivelmente relacionada às suas atividades diárias as margens dos rios, onde existe uma grande abundância dos vetores.
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- 2007
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26. Mansonella ozzardi in Neotropical region of Argentina: Prevalence through time (1986–2010).
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Veggiani Aybar, Cecilia A., Dantur Juri, María J., and Zaidenberg, Mario O.
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FILARIASIS , *PARASITIC diseases , *BLOOD sampling , *MALARIA - Abstract
Human filariasis caused by Mansonella ozzardi is a parasitic infection of a controversial pathology and poorly studied in Argentina. The aim of this study was not only to obtain data of the prevalence of M. ozzardi in Northwestern Argentina through comparison of infection rates in relation to sex and age group determining the range of distribution of mansonelliasis in the region but also to investigate the prevalence of the cases over time. Through field work carried between 1986 and 2010 by technicians of the National Ministry of Health, aiming to detect active cases of malaria in the Northwestern Argentina, blood samples were taken for smear and thick blood. 417 blood samples were examined, 381 of them (91.4%) were positive for M. ozzardi . The highest prevalence was found in Salta province (92.3%) mainly affecting the male sex (92.6%) and the age groups comprised between 48–57 years (97.0%) and ≥ 68 (90.7%). The paired t -test and Spearman coefficients showed significant differences in prevalence according to sex ( t = 2.677; p = 0.015), and according infection rates in males and females/age ( r = 0.994; p = 0.001; r = 0.994, p = 0.001, respectively). The prevalence over time showed a general pattern with the highest cases in 1986, decreasing later during the following years. Aguas Blancas, El Oculto and San Ramón de la Nueva Orán, exhibited a pattern of prevalence according to the general trend but Salvador Mazza and Tartagal, which are also localities close to the border with Bolivia, showed peaks of cases up to 2010. These results provide relevant information about M. ozzardi in Argentina, demonstrating not only its presence and endemicity after almost 100 years from its discovery in the country, but also its wide range of distribution in the region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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27. Human Filariasis in Travelers and Migrants: A Retrospective 25-year Analysis at the Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium
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Steven Van Den Broucke, Caroline Theunissen, Anne-marie Feyens, Johan van Griensven, Patrick Soentjens, Isabel Brosius, Emmanuel Bottieau, Ralph Huits, Steven Declercq, Marjan Van Esbroeck, Jan Clerinx, and Ula Maniewski
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Microbiology (medical) ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,medicine.disease_cause ,Diethylcarbamazine ,Filariasis ,Elephantiasis, Filarial ,Loiasis ,Belgium ,Tropical Medicine ,Mansonelliasis ,Medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Mansonella perstans ,Lymphatic filariasis ,Retrospective Studies ,Transients and Migrants ,biology ,business.industry ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Infectious Diseases ,Wuchereria bancrofti ,Tropical medicine ,Female ,business ,Loa loa ,Onchocerciasis ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Information on human filariasis in international travelers is scarce. We describe the epidemiology, clinical presentation, and outcome of these infections in a reference travel clinic over the past decades. Methods We reviewed all cases of filariasis diagnosed at the Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium, from 1994 to 2018. Diagnosis was obtained by either parasitological methods (confirmed) or strict clinical case definitions (probable). We assessed the characteristics of cases at diagnosis and response to therapy within 3–12 months. Results A total of 320 patients (median age: 41 years; 71% males) were diagnosed with 327 filarial infections (Wuchereria bancrofti = 6, Onchocerca volvulus = 33, Loa loa = 150, Mansonella perstans = 130, unspecified species = 8). Diagnosis was confirmed in 213/320 (67%) patients. European long-term travelers accounted for 166 patients (52%) and visitors/migrants from tropical countries for another 110 (34%). Central Africa was the likely region of acquisition for 294 (92%) patients. The number of filariasis cases decreased from 21.5/year on average in the 1990s to 6.3/year in the past decade, when loiasis became predominant. Cases reported symptoms in >80% of all filarial infections but mansonellosis (45/123 single infections; 37%). Lymphatic filariasis and onchocerciasis cases responded well to conventional therapy. However, 30% of patients with loiasis and mansonellosis experienced treatment failure (with diethylcarbamazine and levamisole-mebendazole, respectively). Conclusions The burden and species distribution of filariasis in travelers evolved in the past decades. Most presentations were symptomatic. Case management would benefit from more effective therapies for loiasis and mansonellosis.
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- 2021
28. Emergence of Mansonella sp. in free-ranging primates in southern Brazil.
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de Souza VK, Schott D, Wagner PGC, Pavarini SP, Alievi MM, Valle SF, and Soares JF
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- Animals, Mansonella genetics, Brazil, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Ecosystem, Mansonelliasis, Alouatta genetics
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Mansonellosis is a neglected and emerging tropical disease. Among all zoonotic filarial diseases, it is probably the most prevalent and least studied, with approximately 114 million people infected. The parasites of Mansonella spp. are among the most common blood parasitemias and are widely found in Africa and Latin America. Through molecular analysis of blood samples from free-ranging primates Sapajus nigritus (n 33) and Alouatta guariba clamitans (n 5) in the southern states of Brazil (Santa Catarina and Rio Grande do Sul), we identified samples positive for Mansonella perstans in two specimens of A. guariba clamitans. A fragment of 578 bp from the ITS intergenic region (5.8S-ITS2-28S) was targeted for an initial PCR screening. Subsequently, positive samples were subjected to other PCR assays targeting a fragment of the 12S and the 18S genes. This is the first record of molecular detection of the agent in this host in the Pampa Biome. With a wide distribution across Brazil and Argentina, these primates may represent a potential wild reservoir for the zoonotic agent of mansonellosis. Entomological and transmission studies are essential to avoid the urbanization of mansonellosis and to understand the cycles of agents in different environmental scenarios., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Japan Monkey Centre.)
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- 2023
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29. Environmental factors and the distribution of mansonelliases in Southern Venezuela
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Gómez J. and Guerrero R.
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mansonelliasis ,Venezuela ,distribution ,vegetation types ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
The distribution of mansonelliases and their relation to various quantitative criteria were determined through the study of 1,057 subjects in 17 localities in ten regions of Amazonas State and Bolivar State. The total prevalence among the blood samples, determined through the Knott technique, was 18.54 %. 11.26 % were parasited by Mansonella perstans, 9.93 % by Mansonella ozzardi, and 2.63 % by both species. The average of microfilaremia was 48.19 mf/mL of blood in M. perstans and 13.79 mf/mL in M. ozzardi. In the regions studied, A/I. ozzardi has a wider area of distribution than M. perstans. Prevalence, average number of parasites per host, and the infection index have a positive and statistically significant correlation with the total annual precipitation mean for each region for M. perstans; in the case of M. ozzardi the quantitative parameters are positively correlated with the altitude of each region, this correlation being statistically significant. With respect to type of vegetation, M. perstans had a higher infection index in Amazonian caatinga transition in pluvial lowland forest, and M. ozzardi in semideciduous forest of the alisio type. Therefore two types of transmission, M. ozzardi-Simulium and M. perstans-Culicoides are suggested.
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- 2000
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30. A field trial of a PCR-based Mansonella ozzardi diagnosis assay detects high-levels of submicroscopic M. ozzardi infections in both venous blood samples and FTA® card dried blood spots.
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Fernandes Medeiros, Jansen, Pires Almeida, Tatiana Amaral, Tavares Silva, Lucyane Bastos, Rubio, Jose Miguel, Crainey, James Lee, Costa Pessoa, Felipe Arley, and Bessa Luz, Sergio Luiz
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FILARIAL worms , *FILARIASIS , *DISEASE incidence , *BLOOD testing , *MICROSCOPY - Abstract
Background: Mansonella ozzardi is a poorly understood human filarial parasite with a broad distribution throughout Latin America. Most of what is known about its parasitism has come from epidemiological studies that have estimated parasite incidence using light microscopy. Light microscopy can, however, miss lighter, submicroscopic, infections. In this study we have compared M. ozzardi incidence estimates made using light microscopy, with estimates made using PCR. Methods: 214 DNA extracts made from Large Volume Venous Blood Samples (LVVBS) were taken from volunteers from two study sites in the Rio Solimões region: Codajás [n = 109] and Tefé [n = 105] and were subsequently assayed for M. ozzardi parasitism using a diagnostic PCR (Mo-dPCR). Peripheral finger-prick blood samples were taken from the same individuals and used for microscopic examination. Finger-prick blood, taken from individuals from Tefé, was also used for the creation of FTA®card dried blood spots (DBS) that were subsequently subjected to Mo-dPCR. Results: Overall M. ozzardi incidence estimates made with LVVBS PCRs were 1.8 times higher than those made using microscopy (44.9 % [96/214] compared with 24.3 % [52/214]) and 1.5 times higher than the PCR estimates made from FTA®card DBS (48/105 versus 31/105). PCR-based detection of FTA®card DBS proved 1.3 times more sensitive at diagnosing infections from peripheral blood samples than light microscopy did: detecting 24/105 compared with 31/105. PCR of LVVBS reported the fewest number of false negatives, detecting: 44 of 52 (84.6 %) individuals diagnosed by microscopy; 27 of 31 (87.1 %) of those diagnosed positive from DBSs and 17 out of 18 (94.4 %) of those diagnosed as positive by both alternative methodologies. Conclusions: In this study, Mo-dPCR of LVVBS was by far the most sensitive method of detecting M. ozzardi infections and detected submicroscopic infections. Mo-dPCR FTA®card DBS also provided a more sensitive test for M. ozzardi diagnosis than light microscopy based diagnosis did and thus in settings where only finger-prick assays can be carried-out, it may be a more reliable method of detection. Most existing M. ozzardi incidence estimates, which are often based on light microscope diagnosis, are likely to dramatically underestimate true M. ozzardi parasitism incidence levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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31. Current profile of Mansonella ozzardi (Nematoda: Onchocercidae) in communities along the Ituxi river, Lábrea municipality, Amazonas, Brazil
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Jansen Fernandes Medeiros, Victor Py-Daniel, Ulysses Carvalho Barbosa, and Guilherme Maerschner Ogawa
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Filariasis ,Mansonelliasis ,Mansonella ozzardi ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
The objective of this paper was to describe the current status of Mansonella ozzardi prevalence among the inhabitants of 12 communities along the Ituxi river, in Lábrea municipality, state of Amazonas. The prevalence of M. ozzardi was determined using thick blood smears obtained by digital punctures. M. ozzardi was found in 30.23% of the samples collected (39/129), with similar prevalence between genders (males: 30.30%; females: 30.16%); the highest prevalence was found in homemakers (45.45%) followed by farmers (38.77%). Among age groups, males and females older than 48 exhibited the highest rates. These results show a significative increase in the prevalence when compared to a epidemiological study made 26 years ago in the same area as well as a different epidemiological profile (gender and occupation) in relation to other areas in Amazonas.
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- 2008
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32. [Hairy cell leukemia: What are the best treatment options for relapsed or refractory patients?]
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Xavier, Troussard, Elsa, Maitre, and Jérôme, Paillassa
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Proto-Oncogene Proteins B-raf ,Leukemia, Hairy Cell ,Bacterial Toxins ,Exotoxins ,Neoplasms, Second Primary ,Antineoplastic Agents, Immunological ,Rare Diseases ,Antigens, Neoplasm ,Drug Resistance, Neoplasm ,Recurrence ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Mutation ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,Mansonelliasis ,Cladribine ,Humans ,Immunotherapy ,Rituximab ,Pentostatin - Abstract
Hairy cell leukemia is a rare form of leukemia: three hundred new cases are diagnosed each year in France. The diagnosis is based on: (1) morphological examination of the blood and bone marrow smear, (2) analysis by flow cytometry of hairy cells, which express three or the four following markers: CD11c, CD25, CD103 and CD123, (3) identification of the BRAF
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- 2020
33. Molecular detection of Mansonella mariae incriminates Simulium oyapockense as a potentially important bridge vector for Amazon-region zoonoses
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Túllio Romão Ribeiro da Silva, Luiz Henrique de Aquino Narzetti, James Lee Crainey, Carlos Henrique Costa, Yago Vinícius Serra dos Santos, Lorena Ferreira de Oliveira Leles, Felipe Arley Costa Pessoa, Ana Carolina Paulo Vicente, and Sérgio Luiz Bessa Luz
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Microbiology (medical) ,Infectious Diseases ,Zoonoses ,Mansonelliasis ,Genetics ,Animals ,Simuliidae ,Mansonella ,Molecular Biology ,Microbiology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Insect Vectors - Abstract
To assess the emergent zoonotic disease risk posed by the voracious human-biting blackfly species Simulium oyapockense in the peripheral regions of an expanding urban centre situated deep in the Brazilian Amazon rainforest.We performed nine human landing catches at three periurban sites surrounding the Brazilian Amazon town of São Gabriel da Cachoeira. Using the detection of non-human primate filarial parasites as an indicator of the zoonotic disease threat posed by a biting insect, we screened 3328 S. oyapockense blackflies for the presence of zoonotic filarial DNA with an ITS-1 PCR assay and Sanger sequencing.Between 98 and 100% of the biting insects captured during our nine collections were identified as S. oyapockense; at our three collection sites and during our three seasonally-distinct collections this species was captured at rates between 28 and 294 blackflies per hour. PCR screening of the march-collected S. oyapockense detected infectious-stage (L3) Mansonella mariae parasites (which are only known to infect non-human primates) in0.15% of the tested head samples.Our results show that residents of the periurban regions of São Gabriel da Cachoeira are routinely exposed to the bites of S. oyapockense blackflies which have previously fed on non-human primates.
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- 2022
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34. Mansonella ozzardi
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Marcelo U. Ferreira, James Lee Crainey, and Sérgio L.B. Luz
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Infectious Diseases ,Antiparasitic Agents ,Mansonelliasis ,Animals ,Humans ,Simuliidae ,Parasitology ,VETORES DE DOENÇAS DE PLANTAS ,Americas ,Mansonella ,Host-Parasite Interactions - Published
- 2020
35. Mansonella perstans, Onchocerca volvulus and Strongyloides stercoralis infections in rural populations in central and southern Togo
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Korbmacher, Francois, Komlan, Kossi, Gantin, Richard G., Poutouli, Wiyao P., Padjoudoum, Koffi, Karabou, Potchoziou, Soboslay, Peter T., and Köhler, Carsten
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Onchocerca volvulus ,Togo ,parasitic diseases ,Mansonelliasis ,Strongyloidiasis ,Prevalence ,lcsh:RC109-216 ,Strongyloides stercoralis ,Onchocerciasis ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Mansonella perstans ,Article ,lcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseases - Abstract
Background: Mansonella perstans, Onchocerca volvulus and Strongyloides stercoralis are widespread helminth parasites in the tropics. Their distribution remains difficult to determine as it may change during national disease control programs and with regional mass drug administration (MDA). Epidemiological surveys are of importance to evaluate the geographical distribution of these helminth parasites and the diseases they may cause, however, up to date epidemiological evaluations on M. perstans and S. stercoralis in Togo are rare, and surveys on O. volvulus are important especially under the aspect of MDA of ivermectin which is performed since decades. Methods: Dry blood samples (n = 924) were collected from rural populations in the Régions Central and Plateaux in Togo, and analyzed by parasite-specific real-time PCR and ELISA techniques. Results: Dry blood samples from 733 persons where investigated by real-time PCR tested for DNA of blood-circulating M. perstans microfilaria, and a prevalence of 14.9% was detected. Distinct differences were observed between genders, positivity was higher in men increasing with age, and prevalence was highest in the Région Plateaux in Togo. IgG4 responses to O. volvulus antigen (OvAg) were studied in 924 persons and 59% were found positive. The distribution of parasite infestation between age and gender groups was higher in men increasing with age, and regional differences were detected being highest in the Région Plateaux. The diagnostic approach disclosed 64,5% positive IgG4 responses to S. stercoralis infective third-stage larvae-specific antigen (SsL3Ag) in the surveyed regions. Antigen cross reactivity of SsL3Ag with parasite co-infections may limit the calculated prevalence. Singly IgG4 positive for SsL3Ag were 13.9%, doubly positive for OvAg and SsL3Ag were 35.5% and triply positive for M. perstans, O. volvulus and S. stercoralis were 9.9%. Conclusions: Mansonelliasis, onchocerciasis and strongyloidiasis remain prevalent in the surveyed regions, yet with local differences. Our observations suggest that transmission of M. perstans, O. volvulus and S. stercoralis may be ongoing. The degree of positive test results in the examined rural communities advocate for the continuation of MDA with ivermectin and albendazole, and further investigations should address the intensity of transmission of these parasites. Keywords: Onchocerca volvulus, Mansonella perstans, Strongyloides stercoralis, Onchocerciasis, Mansonelliasis, Strongyloidiasis, Togo, Prevalence
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- 2018
36. Mansonella ozzardi mitogenome and pseudogene characterisation provides new perspectives on filarial parasite systematics and CO-1 barcoding
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Michel A. Marin, Túllio Romão Ribeiro da Silva, Ana Carolina Paulo Vicente, Sérgio Luiz Bessa Luz, Jansen Fernandes Medeiros, James Lee Crainey, Yago Vinícius Serra Dos Santos, and Felipe Arley Costa Pessoa
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0301 basic medicine ,Mitochondrial DNA ,food.ingredient ,Pseudogene ,lcsh:Medicine ,Article ,DNA sequencing ,Electron Transport Complex IV ,03 medical and health sciences ,food ,Phylogenetics ,parasitic diseases ,Mansonelliasis ,Animals ,Humans ,Clade ,lcsh:Science ,Phylogeny ,Multidisciplinary ,Phylogenetic tree ,biology ,lcsh:R ,RNA, Ribosomal, 5S ,Genomics ,Mansonella ,biology.organism_classification ,030104 developmental biology ,RNA, Ribosomal ,Evolutionary biology ,Genome, Mitochondrial ,lcsh:Q ,Mansonella ozzardi ,Pseudogenes - Abstract
Despite the broad distribution of M. ozzardi in Latin America and the Caribbean, there is still very little DNA sequence data available to study this neglected parasite’s epidemiology. Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequences, especially the cytochrome oxidase (CO1) gene’s barcoding region, have been targeted successfully for filarial diagnostics and for epidemiological, ecological and evolutionary studies. MtDNA-based studies can, however, be compromised by unrecognised mitochondrial pseudogenes, such as Numts. Here, we have used shot-gun Illumina-HiSeq sequencing to recover the first complete Mansonella genus mitogenome and to identify several mitochondrial-origin pseudogenes. Mitogenome phylogenetic analysis placed M. ozzardi in the Onchocercidae “ONC5” clade and suggested that Mansonella parasites are more closely related to Wuchereria and Brugia genera parasites than they are to Loa genus parasites. DNA sequence alignments, BLAST searches and conceptual translations have been used to compliment phylogenetic analysis showing that M. ozzardi from the Amazon and Caribbean regions are near-identical and that previously reported Peruvian M. ozzardi CO1 reference sequences are probably of pseudogene origin. In addition to adding a much-needed resource to the Mansonella genus’s molecular tool-kit and providing evidence that some M. ozzardi CO1 sequence deposits are pseudogenes, our results suggest that all Neotropical M. ozzardi parasites are closely related.
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- 2018
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37. Geographical distribution and species identification of human filariasis and onchocerciasis in Bioko Island, Equatorial Guinea
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Isabel Canorea, Pilar Aparicio, Justino Nguema, Marta Lanza, Laura Moya, Maria Miguel-Oteo, Thuy-Huong Ta, Gema Cenzual, Agustín Benito, James Lee Crainey, and José M. Rubio
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Geographic Mapping ,Onchocerciasis ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ivermectin ,Prevalence ,Child ,Microfilariae ,Lymphatic filariasis ,Skin ,Mansonella streptocerca ,Antiparasitic Agents ,integumentary system ,Middle Aged ,030108 mycology & parasitology ,Infectious Diseases ,Child, Preschool ,Loa loa filariasis ,Equatorial Guinea ,Female ,medicine.drug ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Veterinary (miscellaneous) ,030231 tropical medicine ,Biology ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Filariasis ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Elephantiasis, Filarial ,parasitic diseases ,Mansonelliasis ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Mansonella perstans ,Infection Control ,Reproducibility of Results ,Mansonella ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Onchocerca volvulus ,Dermatology ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Insect Science ,Parasitology - Abstract
Human filariae are vector-borne parasites and the causative agents of various diseases, including human onchocerciasis and lymphatic filariasis. Onchocerciasis causes a spectrum of cutaneous and ophthalmologic manifestations (including blindness) and has long been a major public health problem in Bioko Island (Equatorial Guinea). Bioko Island has been included in the WHO's Onchocerciasis Control Program since 1987. In Bioko Island, the specificity and sensitivity of clinical Onchocerca volvulus diagnosis is key. The objective of this work was to update onchocerciasis elimination progress in Bioko Island, after 18 years of mass ivermectin intervention, and the general filariasis situation through a rapid and accurate molecular method. A cross-sectional study was conducted in Bioko Island from mid-January to mid-February 2014. A total of 543 subjects were included in the study. Whole blood and one skin snip (from lumbar regions) were analysed with a real time PCR assay. Two other skin biopsies were analysed by an expert microscopist. All positive samples were confirmed by sequencing. Traditional microscopic examination of the skin biopsies failed to detect any microfilariae. However, 11 (2.03%) infections were detected using PCR assay, including one O. volvulus, two Mansonella streptocerca, seven Mansonella perstans and one Loa loa infections. PCR assays in blood detected 52 filariae-positive individuals (9.6%) which harboured M. perstans or L. loa. The low prevalence of O. volvulus confirms the success of the Onchocerciasis Control Programme and suggests that Mass Drug Administration in Bioko Island can be interrupted in the near future. The very high prevalence of M. perstans found in skin snips assays raises doubts about the reliability of microscope-based diagnosis of O. volvulus infections.
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- 2018
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38. Hallazgo incidental de microfilarias de Mansonella ozzardi en un paciente pediátrico con linfoma T anaplásico
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Amaranto Suárez Mattos, Alejandra Calderón, and Ana Acevedo
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0301 basic medicine ,Gynecology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,biology ,business.industry ,030106 microbiology ,030231 tropical medicine ,Mansonelliasis ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Oncology ,Medicine ,Mansonella ozzardi ,business - Abstract
Resumen Las filariasis son parasitosis producidas por nematodos hematicos de la familia Filariidae, la Mansonella ozzardi, es uno de los agentes etiologicos distribuido ampliamente en el continente americano y en el Caribe. Presentamos el caso de una paciente de 13 anos de edad, previamente diagnosticada con linfoma T de celula grande anaplasico. Como parte de la evaluacion antes del segundo ciclo B de quimioterapia, se realizo un extendido de sangre periferica en el que se encontro una microfilaria tipificada como Mansonella ozzardi, se dio manejo con una dosis unica de ivermectina y se logro resultado negativo en el control a las 24 horas. Actualmente la paciente se encuentra asintomatica y sin evidencia de recurrencia de la parasitemia y terminando su tratamiento oncologico.
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- 2018
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39. Mise à jour des connaissances concernant quatre maladies délaissées en Haïti : mansonellose, tungose, lèpre, charbon
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C. P. Raccurt, L Mondésir, J. Boncy, L L Andrecy, P Dély, P Adrien, A. Existe, M Chatelier, R M A Jean-Baptiste, and R Honoré
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education.field_of_study ,medicine.medical_specialty ,biology ,Tunga penetrans ,Public health ,Population ,Prevalence ,Mansonelliasis ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Monitoring program ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Geography ,Environmental health ,medicine ,Tungiasis ,Rural area ,education - Abstract
Haiti, like most limited-resources countries in the world, faces numerous neglected infectious diseases. They represent a real public health issue with lethal consequences especially in children. We are reviewing here the available literature on four neglected infectious diseases, mansonelliasis, tungiasis, leprosy and anthrax. Filariasis, due to Mansonella ozzardi, has been totally neglected since its discovery in 1920 in Haiti; it persists in coastal homes with a high prevalence in adults when an effective treatment is available. The skin lesions caused by Tunga penetrans have existed since the pre-Columbian period in Haiti. They persist in the most retreated and hard-to-reach areas where the population lives in precarious conditions and in extreme poverty. New available research data show the importance of the problem with very high prevalence rates in some rural communities far away from any healthcare center. Cases of leprosy are recently reemerging as no monitoring program has been in place since 2004. Finally, anthrax is still endemic; small epidemics resurfacing periodically in families in rural areas. Screening of people for these diseases and managing the cases are necessary to improve health and reduce morbidity and mortality in Haiti.
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- 2018
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40. High Prevalence of Mansonella ozzardi Infection in the Amazon Region, Ecuador
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Carlos Chiluisa-Guacho, Alberto Toapanta, Manuel Calvopiña, Irina Villacres, and David Fonseca
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Male ,Epidemiology ,vector-borne infections ,lcsh:Medicine ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,High Prevalence of Mansonella ozzardi Infection in the Amazon Region, Ecuador ,0302 clinical medicine ,Amazon Region ,Parasite hosting ,Public Health Surveillance ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Geography, Medical ,filariasis ,integumentary system ,biology ,endemicity ,Amazon rainforest ,Dispatch ,Mansonelliasis ,Mansonella ,Infectious Diseases ,Mansonella ozzardi ,Female ,Ecuador ,Microbiology (medical) ,food.ingredient ,prevalence ,030231 tropical medicine ,parasites ,lcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseases ,Filariasis ,03 medical and health sciences ,Mansonella Ozzardi Infection ,food ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,lcsh:RC109-216 ,lcsh:R ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,infection ,zoonoses ,mansonelliasis ,nematodes ,Nested polymerase chain reaction - Abstract
We reviewed Giemsa-stained thick blood smears, obtained through the national malaria surveillance program in the Amazon region of Ecuador, by light microscopy for Mansonella spp. microfilariae. Of 2,756 slides examined, 566 (20.5%) were positive. Nested PCR confirmed that the microfilariae were those of M. ozzardi nematodes, indicating that this parasite is endemic to this region.
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- 2019
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41. Imported Infections with Mansonella perstans Nematodes, Italy
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Dora Buonfrate, Anna Beltrame, Stefania Marocco, Maria Gobbo, Silvia Staffolani, Monica Degani, Federico Gobbi, Andrea Angheben, and Zeno Bisoffi
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Male ,Epidemiology ,lcsh:Medicine ,Serology ,0302 clinical medicine ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,CME ,Eosinophilia ,030212 general & internal medicine ,imported infections ,mansonellosis ,Child ,filariasis ,Travel ,microfilaremia ,biology ,immigrants ,Dispatch ,respiratory system ,Middle Aged ,Infectious Diseases ,Italy ,Imported Infections with Mansonella perstans Nematodes, Italy ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Adult ,Microbiology (medical) ,Adolescent ,030231 tropical medicine ,Antibodies, Helminth ,Emigrants and Immigrants ,parasites ,expatriates ,Mansonella perstans ,eosinophilia ,nematodes ,lcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseases ,Filariasis ,Diagnosis, Differential ,03 medical and health sciences ,Mansonelliasis ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,lcsh:RC109-216 ,Africa South of the Sahara ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,Mansonella ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Peripheral blood ,respiratory tract diseases ,Immunology ,Filarial parasite ,business - Abstract
These infections should be included in differential diagnoses for patients with eosinophilia from disease-endemic countries., We report 74 patients in Italy infected with Mansonella perstans nematodes, a poorly described filarial parasite. M. perstans nematodes should be included in the differential diagnosis for patients with eosinophilia from disease-endemic countries. Serologic analysis is useful for screening, and testing for microfilaremia in peripheral blood should be performed for parasite-positive patients.
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- 2017
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42. Use of the recombinant Onchocerca volvulus protein Ov20/OvS1 for the immunodiagnostic differentiation between onchocerciasis and mansonelliasis and for the characterization of hyperreactive onchocerciasis (sowda).
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Mpagi, J. L., Büttner, D. W., Tischendorf, F. W., Erttmann, K. D., Brattig, N. W., and Büttner, D W
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PROTEINS , *ONCHOCERCIASIS , *CLINICAL chemistry , *DIAGNOSIS , *ANIMAL experimentation , *ANTIGENS , *CARRIER proteins , *COMPARATIVE studies , *DIFFERENTIAL diagnosis , *ELECTROPHORESIS , *ENZYME-linked immunosorbent assay , *FILARIASIS , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *NEMATODES , *RECOMBINANT proteins , *RESEARCH , *WESTERN immunoblotting , *EVALUATION research - Abstract
The protein Ov20/OvS1 was used as antigen in ELISA and Western blot in order to differentiate onchocerciasis from African mansonelliasis and to characterize the hyperreactive form of Onchocerca volvulus infection (sowda). The specificity of the IgG4 Western blot was 98% for the differentiation between persons with onchocerciasis and Mansonella microfilariae (mf) carriers (125 persons with M. perstans and 92 with M. streptocerca), whereas the IgG4 ELISA showed a specificity of 81% in 137 M. perstans mf carriers and 85% in 94 M. streptocerca mf carriers. The sensitivity of Ov20/OvS1 in identifying onchocerciasis using the IgG4 ELISA was 75% for 103 O. volvulus mf carriers with the generalized and 89% for 44 patients with the sowda form of onchocerciasis. IgE antibodies against OvS1 were found in 95% of 39 patients with hyperreactive onchocerciasis but only in 15% of 47 persons with the generalized form. Thus, Ov20/-OvS1 appears a promising candidate antigen for the diagnosis of onchocerciasis and in particular for the detection of the sowda type of disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2000
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43. Deep Sequencing Reveals Occult Mansonellosis Coinfections in Residents From the Brazilian Amazon Village of São Gabriel da Cachoeira
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James Lee Crainey, Lorena Ferreira de Oliveira Leles, Luiz Henrique de Aquino Narzetti, Felipe Arley Costa Pessoa, Yago Vinícius Serra Dos Santos, Sérgio Luiz Bessa Luz, José Miguel Rubio Muñoz, José Joaquín Carvajal Cortés, Túllio Romão Ribeiro da Silva, Liliane Costa Conteville, Carlos Henrique Aguiar Costa, and Ana Carolina Paulo Vicente
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0301 basic medicine ,Microbiology (medical) ,Diagnostic methods ,030231 tropical medicine ,Mansonella perstans Infections ,Deep sequencing ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,law ,Mansonelliasis ,Medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Mansonella perstans ,Polymerase chain reaction ,biology ,Amazon rainforest ,business.industry ,Coinfection ,High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing ,Mansonella ,biology.organism_classification ,Occult ,Virology ,030104 developmental biology ,Infectious Diseases ,Mansonella ozzardi ,business ,Brazil - Abstract
Mansonella ozzardi and Mansonella perstans infections both cause mansonellosis but are usually treated differently. Using a real-time polymerase chain reaction assay and deep sequencing, we reveal the presence of mansonellosis coinfections that were undetectable by standard diagnostic methods. Our results confirm mansonellosis coinfections and have important implications for the disease’s treatment and diagnosis.
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- 2019
44. The Efficacy of Doxycycline Treatment on
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Linda, Batsa Debrah, Richard O, Phillips, Kenneth, Pfarr, Ute, Klarmann-Schulz, Vera Serwaa, Opoku, Norman, Nausch, Wellington, Owusu, Yusif, Mubarik, Anna-Lena, Sander, Christine, Lämmer, Manuel, Ritter, Laura E, Layland, Marc, Jacobsen, Alexander Yaw, Debrah, and Achim, Hoerauf
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Articles ,Mansonella ,Middle Aged ,Ghana ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Young Adult ,Doxycycline ,parasitic diseases ,Mansonelliasis ,Animals ,Humans ,Female ,Child - Abstract
Treating Mansonella perstans is challenged by the low efficacy of registered antihelminthics. Wolbachia endobacteria provide an alternative treatment target because depletion results in amicrofilaremia in filarial infections with Wuchereria bancrofti and Onchocerca volvulus infections. This open-label, randomized study sought to confirm that i) Wolbachia are present in M. perstans in Ghana and ii) doxycycline treatment will deplete Wolbachia and cause a slow, sustained decline in microfilariae (MF). Two hundred and two Ghanaians with M. perstans infection were randomized into early (immediate) and delayed (6 months deferred) treatment groups, given doxycycline 200 mg/day for 6 weeks, and monitored for MF and Wolbachia levels at baseline, 4, 12, and 24 months after the study onset (= time of randomization and start of treatment for the early group). Per protocol analysis revealed that the median MF/mL in the early group declined from 138 at baseline to 64 at month 4 and further to 0 at month 12. In the delayed group, MF load did not change from a baseline median of 97 to 102 at month 4 but declined to 42 at month 12, that is, 6 months after receiving treatment, trailing the early group as expected. By month 24, both treatment groups had reached a median MF level of 0. After treatment, Wolbachia were depleted from MF by ≥ 1-log drop compared with baseline levels. We conclude that M. perstans in Ghana harbor Wolbachia that are effectively depleted by doxycycline with subsequent reduction in MF loads, most likely because of interruption of fertility of adult worms.
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- 2019
45. Laboratory Parameters after Treatment for
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Federico, Gobbi, Francesca, Tamarozzi, Dora, Buonfrate, Paola, Rodari, Stefano, Tais, and Zeno, Bisoffi
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Antibodies, Helminth ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Articles ,Mansonella ,Middle Aged ,Eosinophils ,Leukocyte Count ,Loa ,Young Adult ,Filaricides ,Loiasis ,Italy ,parasitic diseases ,Mansonelliasis ,Animals ,Humans ,Female ,Longitudinal Studies ,Microfilariae ,Follow-Up Studies ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Infections due to Loa loa and Mansonella perstans are common yet elusive neglected filariases. Parasitological cure after treatment is very difficult to assess, as adult parasites are not accessible. Therefore, outside transmission areas, patients require a long follow-up period to ascertain the therapeutic outcome, which is impractical for non-sedentary populations such as migrants. We studied the change over time of microfilaremia, eosinophil counts, and antifilarial antibodies tested with a commercial ELISA test (Bordier Affinity Products, Crissier, Switzerland), in a retrospective cohort of patients with confirmed L. loa and M. perstans infections, to evaluate the role of serology in clinical practice. After treatment, all 22 eligible patients diagnosed in our center between 2015 and 2017 reached amicrofilaremia, with microfilarial counts decreasing sharply within 2 months. Paralleling eosinophil counts, antibodies decreased in all patients, 36% of whom reached sero-reversion or near–sero-reversion in < 20 months. These findings suggest that positive serology is not just residual from a past infection, and may be used for diagnosis even when microfilaremia is negative or cannot be performed. Interestingly, antibodies and eosinophil counts increased following some, but not all, re-treatment courses. If the rise in these parameters reflects death of macrofilariae, caution is required in interpreting high eosinophil counts and antibody titers shortly after treatment, as these may reflect no need for further treatment. To optimize patients’ management, it is now pivotal to ascertain the interval between treatment and macrofilarial death and therefore whether re-treatments are required for complete clearance of parasites.
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- 2019
46. Occurrence of Mansonella ozzardi diagnosed using a polycarbonate membrane in a riverside population of Lábrea in the Western Brazilian Amazon
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Jansen Fernandes Medeiros, Gilberto Fontes, Luís Marcelo Aranha Camargo, Sergio de Almeida Basano, Luana Janaína Souza Vera, Ricardo de Godoi Mattos Ferreira, Juliana Souza de Almeida Aranha Camargo, and Gabriel de Deus Vieira
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Male ,Rural Population ,0301 basic medicine ,Veterinary medicine ,Blood filtration ,0302 clinical medicine ,Prevalence ,Child ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,Amazon rainforest ,Ecology ,Middle Aged ,Brazilian Amazon ,Mansonelliasis ,Mansonella ,Infectious Diseases ,Geography ,Child, Preschool ,Mansonella ozzardi ,DOENÇAS INFECCIOSAS ,Female ,Brazil ,Adult ,Microbiology (medical) ,lcsh:Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,food.ingredient ,Adolescent ,lcsh:RC955-962 ,030231 tropical medicine ,Population ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,food ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,education ,Polycarboxylate Cement ,Micropore Filters ,Infant ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,030104 developmental biology ,Blood smear ,Parasitology ,Polycarbonate membrane - Abstract
INTRODUCTION Mansonella ozzardi is a widely distributed filaria worm in the Amazon region. This study aimed to determine the prevalence of M. ozzardi infection in riverine communities of Lábrea municipality, Amazonas State, Brazil. METHODS A diagnostic blood filtration method in a polycarbonate membrane was used. RESULTS M. ozzardi was found in 50.3% of the sample, with the highest prevalence in farmers/fishermen (69.4%; χ 2 = -19.14, p
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- 2016
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47. Molecular Epidemiology of Blood-Borne Human Parasites in a Loa loa-, Mansonella perstans-, and Plasmodium falciparum-Endemic Region of Cameroon
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Michael P. Fay, Papa M. Drame, Thomas B. Nutman, Sébastien D. S. Pion, Joseph Kubofcik, and Celine Montavon
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0301 basic medicine ,Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Endemic Diseases ,030231 tropical medicine ,Population ,Plasmodium falciparum ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microfilaria ,03 medical and health sciences ,Loa ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Loiasis ,Virology ,parasitic diseases ,Mansonelliasis ,Prevalence ,Medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Mansonella perstans ,Cameroon ,Malaria, Falciparum ,education ,Aged ,education.field_of_study ,Molecular Epidemiology ,biology ,business.industry ,Articles ,Mansonella ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,030104 developmental biology ,Infectious Diseases ,Wuchereria bancrofti ,Immunology ,Coinfection ,Parasitology ,Female ,business ,Loa loa - Abstract
The study of the interactions among parasites within their hosts is crucial to the understanding of epidemiology of disease and for the design of effective control strategies. We have conducted an assessment of infections with Loa loa, Mansonella perstans, Wuchereria bancrofti, and Plasmodium falciparum in eastern Cameroon using a highly sensitive and specific quantitative polymerase chain reaction assay using archived dried whole blood spots. The resident population (N = 1,085) was parasitized with M. perstans (76%), L. loa (39%), and P. falciparum (33%), but not with W. bancrofti Compared with single infections (40.1%), coinfection was more common (48.8%): 21.0% had L. loa-M. perstans (Ll(+)/Mp(+)/Pf(-)), 2.7% had L. loa-P. falciparum (Ll(+)/Pf(+)/Mp(-)), 15.1% had M. perstans-P. falciparum (Mp(+)/Pf(+)/Ll(-)), and 10.0% had L. loa-M. perstans-P. falciparum (Ll(+)/Mp(+)/Pf(+)). Interestingly, those with all three infections (Ll(+)/Mp(+)/Pf(+)) had significantly higher L. loa microfilaria (mf) counts than either single Ll(+) (P = 0.004) or double Ll(+)/Mp(+) (P = 0.024) infected individuals. Of those infected with L. loa, the mean estimated counts of L. loa mf varied based on location and were positively correlated with estimated intensities of M. perstans mf. Finally, at a community level, heavy L. loa infections were concentrated in a few individuals whereby they were likely the major reservoir for infection.
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- 2016
48. Update on the biology and ecology of Culicoides species in the South-West region of Cameroon with implications on the transmission of Mansonella perstans
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Rene Ebai, Yaw Alex Debrah, Raymond Nsaidzedze Ghani, Vera Serwaa Opoku, Laura E. Layland, Winston Patrick Chounna Ndongmo, Peter Enyong, Achim Hoerauf, Abdel Jelil Njouendou, Dizzle Bita Tayong, Manuel Ritter, Samuel Wanji, and Chi Anizette Kien
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Entomology ,food.ingredient ,Fauna ,Culicoides milnei ,030231 tropical medicine ,Population ,Ceratopogonidae ,lcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,food ,Abundance (ecology) ,Mansonelliasis ,Animals ,Humans ,Biting preferences ,lcsh:RC109-216 ,Mansonella perstans ,Cameroon ,education ,education.field_of_study ,Relative abundance ,biology ,Ecology ,Research ,Culicoides species ,Biodiversity ,Mansonella ,Culicoides ,biology.organism_classification ,Breeding sites ,Insect Vectors ,030104 developmental biology ,Infectious Diseases ,Vector (epidemiology) ,Parasitology ,Female - Abstract
Background Culicoides (Diptera; Ceratoponidae) are tiny, stout, blood-sucking flies with a near worldwide distribution. When present, they are often considered a biting nuisance but in addition, they are involved in the transmission of pathogens to humans, domestic and wild animals. Data on Culicoides species in the South-West region of Cameroon dates back to the 1950s. Over the decades, ecological transformation due to agriculture and deforestation may have affected the population dynamics of Culicoides and therefore our study provides an update of their bio-ecology in the region. Furthermore, the role of various Culicoides species in the transmission of parasitic filariae of the genus Mansonella remains inconclusive in this region. This study was designed to address these unknown issues and expand on current scientific knowledge. Results Eight species of Culicoides (C. bedfordi, C. inornatipennis, C. fulvithorax, C. grahamii, C. imicola, C. milnei, C. neavei and C. kumbaensis) were collected using light traps and human baits. Culicoides grahamii was the most abundant species, followed closely by C. milnei. Three species (C. milnei, C. grahamii and C. inornatipennis) were common in all observed larval development sites. Only four species (C. inornatipennis, C. fulvithorax, C. grahamii and C. milnei) were collected on humans. Anthropophilic species were more abundant (P
- Published
- 2018
49. Hallazgo incidental de microfilarias de Mansonella ozzardi en un paciente pediátrico con linfoma T anaplásico
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Suárez Mattos, Amaranto, Calderón, Alejandra, and Acevedo, Ana
- Subjects
Linfoma anaplásico T ,Parasitaemia ,Lymphadenitis ,Anaplastic T-lymphoma ,Mansonella ozzardi ,Linfadenitis ,Mansonelliasis ,Mcimonellci ozzardi ,Parasitemia ,Filariasis - Abstract
Resumen Las filariasis son parasitosis producidas por nemátodos hemáticos de la familia Filariidae, la Mansonella ozzardi, es uno de los agentes etiológicos distribuido ampliamente en el continente americano y en el Caribe. Presentamos el caso de una paciente de 13 años de edad, previamente diagnosticada con linfoma T de célula grande anaplásico. Como parte de la evaluación antes del segundo ciclo B de quimioterapia, se realizó un extendido de sangre periférica en el que se encontró una microfilaría tipificada como Mansonella ozzardi, se dio manejo con una dosis única de ivermectina y se logró resultado negativo en el control a las 24 horas. Actualmente la paciente se encuentra asintomática y sin evidencia de recurrencia de la parasitemia y terminando su tratamiento oncológico. Abstract Filariasis is caused by nematodes in the blood. Mansonella ozzardi is one of the aetiological agents widely distributed in the Americas and the Caribbean. The case is presented on a paediatric patient previously diagnosed with T-cell anaplastic large cell lymphoma. As part of the evaluation before the second cycle B chemotherapy, a peripheral blood smear was performed, in which were found microfilaria, identified as Mansonella ozzardi. The treatment was a single dose of ivermectin, with a negative result being obtained at 24 hours. The patient is currently asymptomatic and with no evidence of recurrence of the parasitaemia, and able to finish the cancer treatment.
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- 2018
50. Detection of Mansonella ozzardi among blood donors from highly endemic interior cities of Amazonas state, northern Brazil
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Claudia M M, Abrahim, Victor, Py-Daniel, Sergio L B, Luz, Nelson A, Fraiji, and Mariane M A, Stefani
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Blood Donors ,Mansonella ,Middle Aged ,Young Adult ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Mansonelliasis ,Animals ,Humans ,Female ,Brazil ,Aged - Abstract
In the Brazilian Amazon, the filarial nematode Mansonella ozzardi co-exists with malaria parasites and thick blood smear microscopy is considered the diagnostic gold standard. Transfusion of M. ozzardi microfilariae does not establish new infections, however microfilariae can survive approximately 2 years in blood-recipients with unknown risk of pathology. Data on transfusion-transmitted filariasis are lacking. This study investigated M. ozzardi parasitemias in blood donors from decentralized centers of "Fundação Hematologia e Hemoterapia do Estado do Amazonas/HEMOAM," Northern Brazil.Cross-sectional investigation employing blood smear microscopy (n = 356) and qualitative nested-M. ozzardi-PCR (227 out of 356) in donor candidates from 19 hemocenters in interior/rural municipalities of Amazonas state.Participants were mostly young males. Positivity by microscopy was 7.9% (28 out of 356) and 23.8% by M. ozzardi-PCR (54 out of 227). Parasitaemias were found in 16 out of 19 municipalities. In 54 M. ozzardi-positives, 24 were ineligible; among 30 that donated, 27 were interdicted by seropositivity (22 anti-HBc, 3 anti-HBc + HBsAg, 1 Chagas+malaria, 1 VDRL). Seropositivty was higher in M. ozzardi-PCR-positives vs M. ozzardi-PCR-negatives (OR = 15.8, 95% CI 4.5-56.1, p0.0001). Three M. ozzardi contaminated blood units were transfused, but no follow-up information on the recipients is available.Our study provides important baseline data on M. ozzardi among blood donors from the Brazilian Amazon. Further investigations in endemic areas are necessary to clarify possible association between M. ozzardi and other infections and also to elucidate whether there is any significant clinical effect upon transfusion of contaminated blood.
- Published
- 2018
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