| Literature DB >> 23192005 |
Humphrey D Mazigo1, Fred Nuwaha, Safari M Kinung'hi, Domenica Morona, Angela Pinot de Moira, Shona Wilson, Jorg Heukelbach, David W Dunne.
Abstract
In Tanzania, the first cases of schistosomiasis were reported in the early 19th century. Since then, various studies have reported prevalences of up to 100% in some areas. However, for many years, there have been no sustainable control programmes and systematic data from observational and control studies are very limited in the public domain. To cover that gap, the present article reviews the epidemiology, malacology, morbidity, and the milestones the country has made in efforts to control schistosomiasis and discusses future control approaches. The available evidence indicates that, both urinary and intestinal schistosomiasis are still highly endemic in Tanzania and cause significant morbidity.Mass drug administration using praziquantel, currently used as a key intervention measure, has not been successful in decreasing prevalence of infection. There is therefore an urgent need to revise the current approach for the successful control of the disease. Clearly, these need to be integrated control measures.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23192005 PMCID: PMC3549774 DOI: 10.1186/1756-3305-5-274
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Figure 1Distribution of schistosomiasis (both and ) in Tanzania: Maximum point prevalence of schistosomes infection and location of and surveys in the United Republic of Tanzania.
Malacological studies from different epidemiological settings and attempted control measures in Tanzania
| Unguja, Pemba, Pemba and all regions of mainland Tanzania. | - On-going- Chemical control using (molluscicides-neclosamide) in Unguja and Pemba ( | Sturrock., 1965
[ | |||
| McCullough
[ | |||||
| Webbe, 1966
[ | |||||
| Stothard | |||||
| Lwambo,1988
[ | |||||
| Mandahl-Barth
[ | |||||
| - Use of molluscicides/extracts from plants in mainland part of the country
[ | Stothard | ||||
| Stothard | |||||
| Webbe | |||||
| Zumstein, 1983
[ | |||||
| Jordan and Webbe., 1982
[ | |||||
| Stothard | |||||
| Pemba, Mafia island and all regions of the mainland part of the country. | On-going Chemical control using (molluscicides-neclosamide) in Unguja and Pemba ( | Mwambungu., 1988
[ | |||
| Kinoti., 1964
[ | |||||
| Sturrock., 1965
[ | |||||
| McCullough
[ | |||||
| Webbe, 1966
[ | |||||
| Lwambo,1988
[ | |||||
| Mandahl-Barth
[ | |||||
| Stothard | |||||
| Jelnes | |||||
| Marti | |||||
| Gabone | |||||
| Not present in Unguja and Pemba. Widely distributed on the mainland part of the country. | None | Doumange | |||
| Mwambungu., 1988
[ | |||||
| Kinoti., 1964
[ | |||||
| Mutani | |||||
| Stothard | |||||
| Probably all regions of mainland part of the country, no report from Unguja and Pemba. Present in the Mafia islands | None | Mwambungu., 1988
[ | |||
| Kinoti., 1964
[ | |||||
| Mutani | |||||
| - Confined in the large water bodies | None | Magendantz., 1972
[ | |||
| – The lake Victoria. Common in the three regions bordering the lake. | McCullough | ||||
| - Absent on the eastern and southern coastal belt bordering Indian ocean, Unguja and Pemba. | Brown., 1980
[ | ||||
| - All regions of mainland part of the country except the eastern coastal regions, Unguja and Pemba. | - Chemical control (Bayer 73, N-tritylmorpholine in irrigations scheme northern Tanzania
[ | Utzinger and Tanner., 2000
[ | |||
| Webbe., 1964
[ | |||||
| - Biological control
[ | Crossland., 1963
[ | ||||
| All regions of mainland part of the country except the central regions of Dodoma, Singida, the eastern and southern coastal regions, Unguja and Pemba. | - Molluscicides
[ | Doumange | |||
| Magendantz., 1972
[ | |||||
| Sturrock., 1962
[ | |||||
| Common in lower lands and highlands southern | None | Magendantz., 1972
[ | |||
| Sturrock., 1962
[ | |||||
| Webbe and Jordan., 1966
[ |
Figure 2Active water contact activities such as fishing, fetching water direct from the lake and agriculture along the lake basin increases the risk of transmission on the southern shore of the Lake Victoria, north-western Tanzania.
Epidemiological and clinical studies reporting prevalence, intensity of infection and morbidities associated with schistosomiasis in Tanzania
| Jordan, 1961
[ | A total of 203 individuals were examined. Higher incidence of | Usagara, Sukuma-land, north-western Tanzania | |
| Forsyth and Bradley, 1966
[ | A total of 2,338 people (1580 males, 758 females) were studied. Overall prevalence was 42% (42% | Bukumbi chiefdom, north-western Tanzania. | |
| - Prevalence of splenomegaly (Hackett grade 2 or more) was 25% and 8% for individuals identified to have | |||
| - Splenomegaly and hepatomegaly was also seen in individuals who had no | |||
| Forsyth and MacDonald 1965
[ | Three urine samples collected from each of the 517 school children. The overall prevalence of | Unguja (Zanzibar) | |
| McMahon 1967
[ | 640 individuals examined and 200 went through a thorough clinical examination. The prevalence of | Mwanza and Ukerewe, north-western Tanzania. | |
| Forsyth, 1969
[ | A two year longitudinal study which studied 1004 people. Overall prevalence of | Unguja (Zanzibar) | |
| - The infection intensities (number of eggs excreted) were reported to exceed 2000 eggs/10mls of midday urine. | |||
| - Haematuria was common in young children and less in older and adult individuals. The urograms of 201 (45.8%) males and 80 (22.5%) were abnormal. The overall prevalence of pathological lesions was 35.4% [calcified bladder 14%, deformed ureters 23.8%, hydronephrosis 15%, non-functioning kidney 4.5% and stones 0.5%]. These pathological lesions were more common in males than in females and were observed to increase with age. | |||
| Rugemalila., 1981
[ | 900 individuals examined from two communities, prevalences of | Mwanza, north-western Tanzania. | |
| Zumstein, 1983
[ | 3,478 school children examined for | Ifakara, South-Eastern Tanzania. | |
| Sarda | 2,500 school children from 12 primary schools. The prevalence in the schools ranged from 5.3 to 55.1%, with an overall prevalence of 19.3%. More males (23.5%) than females (15.0%) were infected, and the highest prevalence was recorded in the 11–16 year old age group. Intensity of infection was higher, ranging from 12 to 96 eggs/10 ml urine in individual schools. 26% of the infected excreted more than 50 eggs/10 ml urine and high rates of haematuria and proteinuria were observed in infected children. Malacological surveys showed two potential vectors, | Dar Es Salaam, Eastern Coast, Tanzania | |
| Kitinya | Histopathological examination of 172 cases of urinary bladder cancer, 72% had squamous cell carcinomas and 46% had | Northern Tanzania | |
| Savioli | | 520 individuals examined for visual haematuria and parasitological examination. Strong variability of day to day of egg excretion within the study participants was observed both in the whole population and the age group 5–19 years. The prevalence of participants excreting one or ≥ 50 eggs/10 ml of urine ranged between 36% - 61%. Gross haematuria had higher specificity (100%) in relation to positive filtration on any day of examination and egg counts of ≥ 50 eggs/10mls of urine. Also a positive reaction of haematuria of any day of examination was associated with the study participants having a high egg count (≥ 50 eggs/10ml urine). | Pemba |
| Savioli | 879 individuals examined for | Pemba Island | |
| Mgeni | 4,113 individuals examined at least once during two years period. First survey, 2,685 individuals examined, 49.3% had | Zanzibar | |
| Albonico | 3,605 school children examined for | Pemba Islands | |
| Kardorff | Parasitological and ultrasonographical examination of 1,659 and 898 individuals for | Ukerewe, north-western Tanzania. | |
| Hatz | 533 school children examined for urinary tract pathologies. Baseline data collection found urinary tract pathology in 67% of 533 children. Lesions of the bladder were significantly associated with egg positivity and microhematuria. The attributable fraction estimate of major bladder lesions due to | Ifakara district, southeastern Tanzania | |
| Lwambo | 6,897 school children aged 7–20 years. Parasitological examination of | Magu district, north-western Tanzania. | |
| Ndyomugyenyi and Minjas 2001
[ | 1,200 schoolchildren examined. The overall prevalence, based on microscopic examination of a single urine sample/subject, was 47.6%. Compared with the girls, the boys were more likely to be excreting schistosome eggs (54.6% versus 40.8%; | Dar Es Salaam, East Coast, Tanzania | |
| Stothard | 400 school children from ten different primary schools were examined for | Unguja (Zanzibar) | |
| Poggensee | 634 school children examined in two villages, prevalence of | Mwanga district, northern Tanzania | |
| Rollinson | 305 schoolchildren examined. Prevalence of | Unguja (Zanzibar) | |
| Ajanga | 972 pregnant women examined. Overall, 63.5% were infected with | Ukerewe, north-western Tanzania | |
| Rudge | | 150 school children examined for | Unguja (Zanzibar) |
| Malenganisho | Parasitological and ultrasonographic examination of 1,447 individuals from two communities (aged 14–87 years). The prevalence of | Ukerewe and Ilemela district, north-western Tanzania. | |
| Lyons | 160 from north (highly endemic) and south (low endemic) of the individuals screened for | Unguja | |
| Sousa-Figueiredo | 147 school children and 47 adult men examined for | Unguja | |
| Stothard | 66 children examined for urogenital schistosomiasis and urinary tract pathologies. Prevalence of egg-patent schistosomiasis was 65.2%, while 77.3% had micro-haematuria and 66.1% had at least one ultrasound-identified urinary tract pathology. | Unguja | |
| Massa | 585 children from the community and 555 children from school were examined for | Umba division, Lushoto district, Tanga. Northern Tanzania. | |
| Poggensee | 657 women examined for | Mwanga district, Kilimanjaro region, Northern Tanzania. | |
| Downs | 457 women aged 18–50 years were examined for female urogenital schistosomiasis. The prevalence of female genital schistosomiasis was 5% (ranged from 0% - 11%) and female urogenital schistosomiasis was associated with HIV infection and younger age. Overall HIV prevalence was 5.9% but was 17% among women with female urogenital schistosomiasis. A significant geographical clustering of schistosomiasis was observed: northern villages near Lake Victoria had more | Sengerema and Misungwi districts, north-western Tanzania | |
| Scheich | 360 schoolchildren (aged 6–17 years) were parasitologically and ultrasonographically examined, 62 % and 57.7% of males and female were infected with | Ukerewe district, north-western Tanzania. | |
| Stothard | 238 children from nine primary schools were examined for | Mafia district, Coastal region, Tanzania. |
Figure 3Arrows showing eggs of (with lateral spine) in the submucosa and mucosa of the ileum and caecum of a 7 year old Tanzania boy presenting with intestinal.
Figure 4Arrows showing eggs of in the urinary bladder wall of a 40 year old male reported at the Bugando Medical Center, north-western Tanzania with a chief complaint of genital mass and frequent micturitions. Histological (H &E) examination of urinary bladder biopsy revealed co-infections of urinary bladder cancer and S. haematobium eggs in the wall of the bladder and fibrosis.