| Literature DB >> 26982178 |
María del Rosario Robles1, John M Kinsella2, Carlos Galliari1, Graciela T Navone1.
Abstract
To date, 21 species of the genus Angiostrongylus (Nematoda: Angiostrongylidae) have been reported around the world, 15 of which are parasites of rodents. In this study, new host, geographic records, and histopathologic studies of Angiostrongylus spp in sigmodontine rodents from Argentina, with an updated summary of records from rodent hosts and host specificity assessment, are provided. Records of Angiostrongylus costaricensis from Akodon montensis and Angiostrongylus morerai from six new hosts and geographical localities in Argentina are reported. The gross and histopathologic changes in the lungs of the host species due to angiostrongylosis are described. Published records of the genus Angiostrongylus from rodents and patterns of host specificity are presented. Individual Angiostrongylus species parasitise between one-19 different host species. The most frequent values of the specificity index (STD) were between 1-5.97. The elevated number of host species (n = 7) of A. morerai with a STD = 1.86 is a reflection of multiple systematic studies of parasites from sigmodontine rodents in the area of Cuenca del Plata, Argentina, showing that an increase in sampling effort can result in new findings. The combination of low host specificity and a wide geographic distribution of Angiostrongylus spp indicates a troubling epidemiological scenario although, as yet, no human cases have been reported.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26982178 PMCID: PMC4804501 DOI: 10.1590/0074-02760150371
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz ISSN: 0074-0276 Impact factor: 2.743
Fig. 1: male adult specimens of Angiostrongylus spp. A:Angiostrongylus costaricensis from caecal mesenteric arteries of Akodon montensis of the province of Misiones, medium lateral view; B: Angiostrongylus morerai from the lungs and heart from Calomys callosus of the province of Formosa, ventral view.
Prevalence of Angiostrongylus spp for each host species and locality
| Host species | Locality | Prevalence by population (%) | Prevalence by ecoregion (%) |
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| Arroyo Paraíso | 1/11 (9) | Selva Paranaense (9) |
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| La Balandra | 1/4 (25) | La Pampa (62.5) |
| Reserva Natural de la Costanera Sur | 4/4 (100) | ||
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| Refugio Moconá | 4/27 (14.8) | Selva Paranaense (20) |
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| Refugio Moconá | 2/3 (66) | |
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| Reserva El Bagual | 2/11 (18.18) | Chaco Húmedo (17.4) |
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| Reserva El Bagual | 1/10 (10) | |
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| Reserva El Bagual | 1/2 (50) | |
Fig. 2: macroscopic and histopathological examination of heart and lung infected with Angiostrongylus morerai. A: adult specimen in pulmonary artery of Akodon azarae; B: detail of female specimen in pulmonary artery; C: lung with macroscopic lesions (firm nodules) of verminous pneumonia; D: lungs ofDeltamys kempi with detail of the interior of a blood vessel containing adult worm; E: detail of adult worm; F: lungs ofAkodon montensis with superficial interstitium and alveoli containing eggs, larvae, and adult worm; G: detail of eggs, larvae, and adult worm in interior of a blood vessel; H: lungs ofA. azarae with detail of interstitium, alveoli, and vessels contained nematode eggs and larvae; I: detail of granulomatous inflammatory reactions, vessel, and interstitium contained eggs and nematode larvae; J: lungs of Calomys callosus with superficial interstitium and alveoli containing nematode larvae; K: detail of granulomatous inflammatory reactions surround each set of eggs and larvae; L: lungs of Necromys lasiurus with interstitium, alveoli, and vessels contained nematode eggs and larvae; M: granulomatous inflammatory reactions, vessel, and interstitium contained eggs on different embryonic stages and nematode larvae.
List of Angiostrongylus spp from mainly rodents (and no rodents) with values of host specificity (STD) and variance (VarSTD) taxonomic distinctness index
| Parasite species | Host species | STD and VarSTD | Country | Site infection | References |
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| 2 and 0 | Upper Volta (Africa) | Large abscesses in the lungs | Petter (1972) |
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| 5.97 and 3.55 | China (Asia); Asian and Pacific Islands and Australia (Oceania); Brazil, Cuba, Haiti, Jamaica, Puerto Rico, United States of America (USA) (America) | Lungs and heart (central nervous system) | Chen (1935), Mackerras & Sandars (1955), Cross (1979), Aguiar et al. (1981), Andersen et al. (1986), Alicata (1988), Wright et al. (1991), Cooke-Yarborough et al. (1999), Barrett et al. (2002), Kim et al. (2002), Lindo et al. (2002), Raccurt et al. (2003), Smales et al. (2004), Simões et al. (2011), Lunn et al. (2012), Maldonado et al. (2012), Ma et al. (2013), Morton et al. (2013), Okano et al. (2014) |
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| 5.37 and 4.28 | Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Mexico, Panama, Peru, Puerto Rico, USA, Venezuela, Argentina (America) | Caecum mesenteric arteries (intestinal wall) | Morera (1970), Tesh et al. (1973), Monge et al. (1978), Ubelaker & Hall (1979), Malek (1981), Andersen et al. (1986), Teixeira et al. (1990), Vargas et al. (1992), Juminer et al. (1993), Miller et al. (2006), Maldonado et al. (2012) |
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| 2.67 and 0.22 | France, Portugal, Hungary, Finland (Europe) | Lungs and heart | Dróźdź & Doby (1970), Doby et al. (1971), Mészáros (1972), Tenora et al. (1983) |
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| 0 | Brazil (America) | Lungs and heart | Souza et al. (2009) |
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| 1.67 and 0.22 | Queensland, New South Wales, Tasmania (Oceania) | Lungs and heart (central nervous system) | Bhaibulaya (1968, 1975), 1975), Stokes et al. (2007) |
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| 3.2 and 5.61 | Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand (Asia-Oceania) | Lungs and heart (central nervous system) | Bhaibulaya & Cross (1971), Bhaibulaya & Techasophonmani (1972), Carney & Stafford (1979), Cross (1979), Lim & Ramachandran (1979), Pipitgool et al. (1997) |
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| 1.86 and 0.12 | Argentina (America) | Lungs and heart | Robles et al. (2008, 2012), 2012) |
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| 0 | Azerbaidzhan (Asia) | Lungs and heart | Tarzhimanova & Chertkova (1969), Spratt (2015) |
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| 0 | Soviet Union (Eurasia) | Lungs and heart | Jushkov (1971), Spratt (2015) |
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| 0-1 | Mozambique, Kenya (Africa) | Lungs and heart | Alicata (1968), Kamiya & Fukumoto (1988), Spratt (2015) |
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| 0 | USA (America) | Lungs and heart | Kinsella (1971) |
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| 0 | Turkey (Eurasia) | Lungs and heart | Merdivenci (1964), Spratt (2015) |
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| 1.93 and 0.06 | Thailand (Asia) | Mesenteric arteries | Ohbayashi et al. (1979, 1983), 1983), Kamiya et al. (1980) |
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| 0 | Nigeria (Africa), Albania (Europa) | Lungs and heart | Baylis (1928), Spratt (2015) |
a: Tatera kempi;b: Taterillus nigeriae;c: Neotoma floridanus;d: Oryzomys caliginosus;e: Oryzomys fulvescens;f: Oxymycterus judex;g: Oryzomys albigularis;h: Oryzomys ratticeps;i: Zygodontomys microtinus;j: Hylobates syndactylus,Maxomys whiteheadi; k:Pitymys subterranus; l:Clethrionomys glareolus; m:Rattus bowersi; n:Rattus sabanus; o:Maxomys surifer; p:Rattus cremoriventer; q:Clethrionomys rutilus, Rattus muelleri; r:Indeterminate; s:Praomys natalensis; t:Rattus berdmorei.
Fig. 3: number of host species (left) and host specificity values (right) for Angiostrongylus species from rodents. STD: specificity index.