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The ecology of cutaneous leishmaniasis in Nizzana, Israel: infection patterns in the reservoir host, and epidemiological implications
- Source :
- International journal for parasitology. 32(2)
- Publication Year :
- 2002
-
Abstract
- We conducted an extensive interdisciplinary study in an emerging focus of cutaneous leishmaniasis in the Western Negev Desert of Israel between July 1998 and February 2000. The aims of the this study were to determine (1) the reservoir hosts, (2) the distribution of the pathogen within the host range, (3) the associations of host, vector, and pathogen within defined habitats, (4) the demographic distribution of the pathogen within the host populations, and (5) to apply the newly acquired epizootiological data to explain morbidity patterns in humans. Fourteen square (60 m width) sampling plots were delimited in three types of habitats each with a different kind of substrate: loess, sand, and sand-loess ecotone. Rodents and sand flies were trapped and several environmental variables were measured. Leishmania infections in rodents were detected microscopically in stained smears of ear tissue and by a Leishmania-specific polymerase chain reaction. Results indicate that, contrary to previous reports, Psammomys obesus and not Meriones crassus is the main reservoir host in the region. Additional rodents (12 Gerbillus dasyurus and two M. crassus) were also found positive for Leishmania DNA. Prevalence of Leishmania infections amongst P. obesus was highest in loess habitats (65%), intermediate in the sandy-loess ecotone (20%), and 0% in the sandy habitats. Psammomys obesus individuals in the loess habitat of the Nizzana ruins were larger, on average (probably older), than those in the sandy habitat of the Mt. Keren junction. Sand fly density was positively correlated to soil moisture being higher in the relatively humid plots of Nizzana ruins and much lower in the drier sandy soil of Mt. Keren. Elucidation of fundamental ecological factors affecting this disease has helped explain an apparent discrepancy between the distribution of the disease in the zoonotic system and among humans.
- Subjects :
- Meriones crassus
Male
Leishmaniasis, Cutaneous
Disease Vectors
Polymerase Chain Reaction
Statistics, Nonparametric
Cutaneous leishmaniasis
medicine
Prevalence
Animals
Humans
Leishmania major
Psychodidae
Israel
biology
Ecology
Host (biology)
Ear
Ecotone
DNA, Protozoan
biology.organism_classification
medicine.disease
Insect Vectors
Infectious Diseases
Military Personnel
Vector (epidemiology)
Parasitology
Female
Psammomys
Seasons
Desert Climate
Gerbillinae
Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00207519
- Volume :
- 32
- Issue :
- 2
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- International journal for parasitology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....3d3b9e31e5b5e5b6bc6765b7487eef32