| Literature DB >> 21429191 |
Domenico Otranto1, Mark L Eberhard.
Abstract
Nowaday, zoonoses are an important cause of human parasitic diseases worldwide and a major threat to the socio-economic development, mainly in developing countries. Importantly, zoonotic helminths that affect human eyes (HIE) may cause blindness with severe socio-economic consequences to human communities. These infections include nematodes, cestodes and trematodes, which may be transmitted by vectors (dirofilariasis, onchocerciasis, thelaziasis), food consumption (sparganosis, trichinellosis) and those acquired indirectly from the environment (ascariasis, echinococcosis, fascioliasis). Adult and/or larval stages of HIE may localize into human ocular tissues externally (i.e., lachrymal glands, eyelids, conjunctival sacs) or into the ocular globe (i.e., intravitreous retina, anterior and or posterior chamber) causing symptoms due to the parasitic localization in the eyes or to the immune reaction they elicit in the host. Unfortunately, data on HIE are scant and mostly limited to case reports from different countries. The biology and epidemiology of the most frequently reported HIE are discussed as well as clinical description of the diseases, diagnostic considerations and video clips on their presentation and surgical treatment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21429191 PMCID: PMC3071329 DOI: 10.1186/1756-3305-4-41
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Classification (Order, Family and Species) of zoonotic helminths causing human blindness divided according their route of transmission (Vector borne zoonosis, VbZ, food consumption, FbZ, and those at direct transmission from the environment, EbZ), geographical distribution, localization in the eyes and zoonotic relevance.
| OrderOrder (Family) | Species (common name) | Route of transmission | Geographical distribution | Localization | Definitive host | REF |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ingestion of snails, slugs, shellfish and crustacean (FbZ) | Asia, Australia, Africa, USA, Pacific Islands, Caribbean Islands, and South America | Anterior chamber, vitreous | Rat | 131,137 | ||
| Dog faeces (EbZ) | Worldwide | Eyebrows and eyelds, aqueous humor and vitreous | Dog | 11 | ||
| Cat faeces (EbZ) | Worldwide | Aqueous humor and vitreous | Cat | 11 | ||
| Raccoon faeces (EbZ) | North America, Europe, Japan | Vitreous | Raccoon | 46 | ||
| Ingestion of crustacean (cyclops), | Worldwide | Anterior chamber, eye lid | Dog, cat, wild carnivores, | 49 | ||
| infected fish, frogs (FbZ) | raccoon, opossum | |||||
| Europe, Asia, Africa | Subconjunctival | Dog | 8, 197 | |||
| Worldwide | Anterior chamber | Dog, cat | 8,76 | |||
| Canada, USA | Subconjunctival | Raccon | 8 | |||
| Canada, USA | Anterior chamber | Porcupine | 198 | |||
| Mosquitoes (VbZ) | Canada, Oregon, USA | Anterior chamber | Beaver | 8 | ||
| Fleas, louses (VbZ) | Worldwide | Subconjunctival | Dog | 79 | ||
| Worldwide | Subconjunctival, cornea | Cattle | 8 | |||
| Worldwide | Subconjunctival, cornea | Horse | 169 | |||
| Europe, Austria | Subconjunctival, cornea | Red deer | 199 | |||
| Europe, Asia, Africa | Subconjunctival, cornea | Horse | 170 | |||
| Japan | Subconjunctival, cornea | Bear | 167 | |||
| Europe | Subconjunctival | Dog | 172 | |||
| North America | Subconjunctival | Lagomorphs | 8,62,64,83 | |||
| North America | Subconjunctival | Lagomorphs | 8,62,83 | |||
| China, Southeastern Asia, Europe, USA | Subconjunctival, intraocular | Dogs, cats, rabbits and wild carnivores | 160 | |||
| (Trichuridae) | Ingestion of raw meat (FbZ) | Worldwide | Orbit, Ocular muscles | Numerous, domestic and wild animals | 15 | |
| Ingestion of crustacean, frogs, birds, snakes (FbZ) | Middle East, Australia | Subconjunctival | Carnivores | 102,109 | ||
| Spargana (other species) | Ingestion of crustacean, frogs, birds, snakes (FbZ) | South America, Asia | Subconjunctival | Carnivores | 102,109 | |
| Cyclophyllidea (Teniidae) | ||||||
| Food contaminated by dog faeces (EbZ) | USA and Europe | Anterior | Carnivores | 89 | ||
| Food contaminated by dog faeces (EbZ) | Worldwide | Intraocular | Dog | 112 | ||
| Food contaminated by wild carnivores dog faeces (EbZ) | Worldwide | Intraocular | Wolf, jackal, coyote | 115 | ||
| Food contaminated by wild carnivores dog faeces (EbZ) | South and Central America | Orbit | Wild felids | Wild felids | ||
| dog faeces (EbZ) | Worldwide | Intraocular | Dog | 95 | ||
| water plants (FbZ) | Worldwide | Anterior chamber | Domestic and wild ruminants, horse | 120 | ||
| Frogs (FbZ) | Asia, USA, Canada | Intraocular | Canids | 122 | ||
| Contaminated food or direct contact with the eye mucosa (EbZ) | Europe, Asia, and America | Conjunctival | Birds | 124 | ||
Ocular tissue affected and symptoms caused by zoonotic helminths (Genus and/or Species) at different stage [41,63].
| Ocular tissue affected | Signs | Helminths involved |
|---|---|---|
| Eyebrows and eyelids | Eye lid edema | |
| Lacrimal duts and glands | Lacrymation | |
| Orbit | Exophthalmos | |
| Ocular muscles | Diplopia | |
| Subconjunctival cysts | ||
| Chemosis and conjunctivitis | ||
| Hemorrhages | ||
| Keratitis, scleritis | ||
| Anterior chamber | Parasites in the anterior Chamber | |
| Cysts in the anterior chamber | ||
| Hypopyon | ||
| Secondary glaucoma | ||
| Iris | Mydriasis | |
| Miosis | ||
| Distortion of the pupil | ||
| Iritis and iridocyclitis | ||
| Vitreous body | Hemorrhages | |
| Cysts | ||
| Parasites in the vitreous Cyclitis | spargana, Acanthocheilonema, Dirofilaria, Onchocerca Gnathostoma, Onchocerca, Toxocara, Trichinella | |
| Optic nerve | Papilledema, papillitis, and optic atrophy | |
| Retina and chorioidea | Hemorrhages | |
| Retinal detachment | ||
| Cysts | ||
| Retinitis and choroiditis | ||
Figure 1Nematode larva in the retinal fundus. Larva, presumably of Baylisascaris procyonis, in the retinal fundus of a patient. The infection was presumed to have been acquired in Connecticut, USA. Larva measures approximately 1.4 mm and was treated with retinal lasar. (Original; courtesy of Drs. Caplivski, Bhatnagar, and Goldberg, Mount Sinai School of Medicine).
Figure 2. Gnathostoma spinigerum larva in the anterior chamber of the eye of patient in Thailand. (From Teekhasaenee C, Richt R, Kanchanaranya. Ocular parasitic infection in Thailand. Rev Inf Dis. 1986, 8:350-356).
Figure 3. Anterior end of an Acanthocheilonema - Mansonella -like worm removed from the posterior chamber of the vitreous of a patient in Kansas, USA. Scale bar = 500 μm. Original; courtesy of DPDx, CDC.
Figure 4Cysticercus cyst of . Retinal photograph showing budding cysticercus of Taenia crassiceps in situ. (From the collection of Herman Zaiman, "A Presentation of Pictorial Parasites").
Figure 5Coenurus cyst behind displaced retina. Sagittal section of eye from Ghanaian showing coenurus cyst with multiple protoscoleces lying behind displaced retina. (From Parasites In Human Tissues, Orihel and Ash, ASCP Press, 1995).
Figure 6Coenurus cyst after surgical removing from the eye. Intact coenurus cyst removed from subconjunctival tissue an Ugandan child showing multiple protoscoleces. (Original by Paul Beaver).
Figure 7. Freely moving Alaria mesocercaria on the retina of the eye. The anterior sucker is evident on the left side of the organism. (From the collection of Herman Zaiman, "A Presentation of Pictorial Parasites").
Figure 8. Angiostrongylus cantonensis in the anterior chamber. (Original by John Cross, courtesy of Lawrence Ash).
Figure 9. Heavy infection by Thelazia callipaeda nematodes in the conjunctiva of a dog from Italy.
Figure 10. Posterior end of a female Thelazia californiensis from the conjunctiva of a human patient in New Hampshire, USA showing cuticle serration. Scale bar = 50 μm. Original; courtesy of DPDx, CDC.
Figure 11Zoonotic . Zoonotic Onchocerca sp. from a nodular granuloma of the eye in a patient from Ohio, USA. a) Transverse section of female worm shown in Fig. 5a encased in a nodular granuloma. Low cuticular ridges and inner striae, 2 per ridge, are evident Hematoxylin and eosin stain. Scale bar = 50 μm. (Original; courtesy of Drs. Yassin and Hariri, University of Pittsburg Medical Center). b) Short piece of female Onchocerca sp. removed from granuloma tissue before fixation, showing characteristic, diagnostic structures of the cuticle with circular ridges and inner cuticular striae. Scale bar = 150 μm. (Original; courtesy of Drs. Yassin and Hariri, University of Pittsburg Medical Center).
Informative morphological characters and measurements of different stage of helminths infecting human eyes [41,63].
| Parasite | Location | Size | Comments | Stage* |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intraocular | ≤ 400 μm × 15-21 μm | Smallest of the nematode larvae encountered in the eye | ML | |
| Intraocular | 1-2 mm × 50-60 μm | Relatively small but easily recognized as being larger than | ML | |
| Intraocular | 1-5 mm × 200-600 μm | Much more robust than other nematode larva; presence of cuticular spines and head bulb distinctive | ML | |
| Intraocular | ≤1-2 cm × 200-300 μm | One of the larger, more robust worms found in intraocular location | L, SA | |
| Eye socket | 5-20 mm × 250-800 μm | Distinct morphologic features; free in orbit | A, L | |
| Intraocular | 2-3 mm × 600-800 μm | Ovoid to oblong, flat, solid body | ML, SA | |
| Spargana | Intraocular or eyelid | 5-20 mm × 1-2 mm | Long, flat solid body with pseudosegmentation | ML |
| Coenurus | Intraocular | < 1 cm | Fluid filled cyst ovoid in shape and of variable size | L |
| Conjunctiva | 2-15 cm × 150-400 μm | Males smaller than females; most often closely associated with conjunctiva; worms in the eye are appreciably smaller than those on conjunctiva | L | |
| Intraocular | 1-1.65 cm × 160-400 μm | Not a common location for this worm and very few confirmed cases exist | L | |
| Conjunctiva | 10 cm × 300 μm | SA | ||
| Intraocular | 3-5 cm × 80-100 μm | L | ||
| Conjunctiva | total length unknown but several cm or more × 150-250 μm | L, SA | ||
| Intraocular | 1.6 - 2.1 cm × <100 μm | Accurate identification to species has been | L, SA | |
| Conjunctiva | 3.2 cm × <150 μm | |||
*Larva = L; Migrating larva = ML; SA = Subadult; A = Adult