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Use of sentinel snails for the detection of Schistosoma haematobium transmission on Zanzibar and observations on transmission patterns

Use of sentinel snails for the detection of Schistosoma haematobium transmission on Zanzibar and observations on transmission patterns
Use of sentinel snails for the detection of Schistosoma haematobium transmission on Zanzibar and observations on transmission patterns
Urogenital schistosomiasis is an important public health issue in Zanzibar. Transmission of the parasite to the human population is related to the distribution of the intermediate snail host, Bulinus globosus. We measured B. globosus abundance and Schistosoma haematobium prevalence within snails in a series of naturally occurring populations and compared prevalence detected by observing cercarial shedding for patent infections, and by PCR using DraI repeat. A total of 2146 B. globosus were collected throughout the study period from 2003 to 2007; of these 85 (3.96%) were shedding cercariae. The levels of infection detected by PCR were consistently higher (40-100 percent). Levels of exposure to miracidia in the field were measured using sentinel snails. B. globosus (a susceptible host) and B. nasutus (a non-susceptible host) were placed in cages at transmission sites for 72h to observe rates of penetration by miracidia. Both B. globosus and B. nasutus tested positive for S. haematobium by PCR (up to 24% infected) indicating frequent contamination of the waterbodies with S. haematobium miracidia. The use of sentinel snails coupled with PCR diagnostics could be a sensitive tool for mapping and monitoring transmission of schistosomiasis in areas of low prevalence.
Animals, Bulinus/parasitology, Humans, Parasite Load, Parasitology/methods, Prevalence, Schistosoma haematobium/isolation & purification, Schistosomiasis haematobia/epidemiology, Sentinel Surveillance, Tanzania/epidemiology, Water/parasitology
0001-706X
234-40
Allan, Fiona
db50b97e-6d0a-45d3-881d-79222bec19cb
Dunn, Alison M
be808944-d8e0-4215-b368-aa08c7972cef
Emery, Aidan M
ac60cfd0-4b72-4799-8a5a-c1bebd5609ee
Stothard, J Russell
38c65736-a96b-46e0-bbd9-e65744b130ad
Johnston, David A
b41163c9-b9d2-425c-af99-2a357204014e
Kane, Richard A
28611046-0fdd-4bee-a16c-6e46d5da776e
Khamis, Alipo N
2f3a4dd3-83f9-4ede-987b-f68573799b67
Mohammed, Khalfan A
d66e0492-56d5-4e04-9849-74fe0758de1b
Rollinson, David
917d0e09-176f-4058-89ff-ec2ad3a496ad
Allan, Fiona
db50b97e-6d0a-45d3-881d-79222bec19cb
Dunn, Alison M
be808944-d8e0-4215-b368-aa08c7972cef
Emery, Aidan M
ac60cfd0-4b72-4799-8a5a-c1bebd5609ee
Stothard, J Russell
38c65736-a96b-46e0-bbd9-e65744b130ad
Johnston, David A
b41163c9-b9d2-425c-af99-2a357204014e
Kane, Richard A
28611046-0fdd-4bee-a16c-6e46d5da776e
Khamis, Alipo N
2f3a4dd3-83f9-4ede-987b-f68573799b67
Mohammed, Khalfan A
d66e0492-56d5-4e04-9849-74fe0758de1b
Rollinson, David
917d0e09-176f-4058-89ff-ec2ad3a496ad

Allan, Fiona, Dunn, Alison M, Emery, Aidan M, Stothard, J Russell, Johnston, David A, Kane, Richard A, Khamis, Alipo N, Mohammed, Khalfan A and Rollinson, David (2013) Use of sentinel snails for the detection of Schistosoma haematobium transmission on Zanzibar and observations on transmission patterns. Acta Tropica, 128 (2), 234-40. (doi:10.1016/j.actatropica.2013.01.003).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Urogenital schistosomiasis is an important public health issue in Zanzibar. Transmission of the parasite to the human population is related to the distribution of the intermediate snail host, Bulinus globosus. We measured B. globosus abundance and Schistosoma haematobium prevalence within snails in a series of naturally occurring populations and compared prevalence detected by observing cercarial shedding for patent infections, and by PCR using DraI repeat. A total of 2146 B. globosus were collected throughout the study period from 2003 to 2007; of these 85 (3.96%) were shedding cercariae. The levels of infection detected by PCR were consistently higher (40-100 percent). Levels of exposure to miracidia in the field were measured using sentinel snails. B. globosus (a susceptible host) and B. nasutus (a non-susceptible host) were placed in cages at transmission sites for 72h to observe rates of penetration by miracidia. Both B. globosus and B. nasutus tested positive for S. haematobium by PCR (up to 24% infected) indicating frequent contamination of the waterbodies with S. haematobium miracidia. The use of sentinel snails coupled with PCR diagnostics could be a sensitive tool for mapping and monitoring transmission of schistosomiasis in areas of low prevalence.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 4 January 2013
Published date: 11 January 2013
Additional Information: Copyright © 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords: Animals, Bulinus/parasitology, Humans, Parasite Load, Parasitology/methods, Prevalence, Schistosoma haematobium/isolation & purification, Schistosomiasis haematobia/epidemiology, Sentinel Surveillance, Tanzania/epidemiology, Water/parasitology

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 468888
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/468888
ISSN: 0001-706X
PURE UUID: 998f72e2-ce50-4d50-8171-8b409dc7ea62
ORCID for David A Johnston: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6703-6014

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Date deposited: 31 Aug 2022 16:53
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:11

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Contributors

Author: Fiona Allan
Author: Alison M Dunn
Author: Aidan M Emery
Author: J Russell Stothard
Author: David A Johnston ORCID iD
Author: Richard A Kane
Author: Alipo N Khamis
Author: Khalfan A Mohammed
Author: David Rollinson

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