Literature DB >> 15058817

Foodborne and waterborne parasites.

Edoardo Pozio1.   

Abstract

More than 72 species of protozoan and helminth parasites can reach humans by food and water, and most of these infections are zoonoses. Some parasites show a cosmopolitan distribution, others a more restricted distribution due to their complex life cycles, which need the presence of one or more intermediate hosts. Of this large number of pathogens, only Toxoplasma gondii can be transmitted to humans by two different ways, i.e., by cysts present in infected meat and by oocysts contaminating food and water. Eleven helminthic species (Taenia saginata, Taenia solium, Taenia asiatica, Trichinella spiralis, Tr. nativa, Tr. britovi, Tr. pseudospiralis, Tr. murrelli, Tr nelsoni, Tr. papuae and Tr. zimbabwensis) can grow in meat of different animal species and can be transmitted to humans by the consumption of raw meat or meat products. Twenty trematode species, four cestode species and seven nematode species can infect humans through the consumption of raw sea- and/or fresh-water food (fishes, molluscs, frogs, tadpoles, camarons, crayfishes). Six species of Cryptosporidium, Isospora belli, Cyclospora cayetanensis, Giardia duodenalis and Entamoeba histolytica/E. dispar can contaminate food and water. Among the helminths, seven trematode species, seven cestode species and five species of nematodes can reach humans by contaminated food and water. Diagnostic and detection methods that can be carried out routinely on food and water samples are available only for few parasites (Cryptosporidium sp., Giardia sp., Anisakidae, Trichinella sp., Taenia sp.), i.e., for parasites which represent a risk to human populations living in industrialised countries. The majority of food and waterborne infections of parasitic origin are related to poverty, low sanitation, and old food habits.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 15058817

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Microbiol Pol        ISSN: 0137-1320


  6 in total

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Review 4.  Sleep viewed as a state of adaptive inactivity.

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5.  Probable hepatic capillariosis and hydatidosis in an adolescent from the late Roman period buried in Amiens (France).

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6.  Genetic Variation of Giardia lamblia Isolates from Food-handlers in Kashan, Central Iran.

Authors:  Hossein Hooshyar; Shahrbanou Ghafarinasab; Mohsen Arbabi; Mahdi Delavari; Sima Rasti
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  6 in total

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