| Literature DB >> 27213420 |
Meruyert Beknazarova1, Harriet Whiley2, Kirstin Ross3.
Abstract
Strongyloidiasis is a disease caused by soil transmitted helminths of the Strongyloides genus. Currently, it is predominately described as a neglected tropical disease. However, this description is misleading as it focuses on the geographical location of the disease and not the primary consideration, which is the socioeconomic conditions and poor infrastructure found within endemic regions. This classification may result in misdiagnosis and mistreatment by physicians, but more importantly, it influences how the disease is fundamentally viewed. Strongyloidiasis must be first and foremost considered as a disease of disadvantage, to ensure the correct strategies and control measures are used to prevent infection. Changing how strongyloidiasis is perceived from a geographic and clinical issue to an environmental health issue represents the first step in identifying appropriate long term control measures. This includes emphasis on environmental health controls, such as better infrastructure, sanitation and living conditions. This review explores the global prevalence of strongyloidiasis in relation to its presence in subtropical, tropical and temperate climate zones with mild and cold winters, but also explores the corresponding socioeconomic conditions of these regions. The evidence shows that strongyloidiasis is primarily determined by the socioeconomic status of the communities rather than geographic or climatic conditions. It demonstrates that strongyloidiasis should no longer be referred to as a "tropical" disease but rather a disease of disadvantage. This philosophical shift will promote the development of correct control strategies for preventing this disease of disadvantage.Entities:
Keywords: S. stercoralis; Strongyloides; global; socioeconomic status; strongyloidiasis prevalence
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27213420 PMCID: PMC4881142 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph13050517
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Global Strongyloides stercoralis prevalence distribution.
| NO. | Most Likely Infective Source | Climate Classification | Population Studied | SES | Type of Detection | Symptoms Diagnosed | Comments/Details | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | East Africa | Group A, C, B * | Immigrants (≥16) lived in the refugee camps, Melbourne community health center and clinic patients | Developing economy 1 ** | 11% (14/124) | Serology | Fever (34%), Stomach pain (30%), weight loss (25%), and diarrhea (13%) | Arrived to Australia, Melbourne between 1997–2000 | [ |
| 2. | Cambodia | Group A | Immigrants and refugees (≥15), Melbourne community health center and clinic patients | Developing economy, 1 | 42% (97/230) | Serology | Not reported | Arrived to Australia, Melbourne between 1974–2002 | [ |
| 3. | Laos | Group A | Immigrants (≥18) | N/a | 24% (22/93) | Serology | 75% (60/80) had previously worms, not known symptoms | Arrived to Australia, Melbourne between 1980–1989 | [ |
| 4. | Brazil (North, Northeast, Midwest, Southeast, South) | Group A, C | General population | Developing economy, 3 | 5.5% | Stool examination | Not reported | Study conducted from 1990 to 2009 | [ |
| 5. | Mexico, Honduras, Ethiopia, El Salvador, Zambia, Argentina, Congo, Cuba, Grenada, Guatemala, India, Kenya, Niger, Tanzania, Vietnam | Group A, C, B | HIV-positive immigrants (≥17) | Developing economy, 1,2,3 | 26% (33/128) | Serology | Weight loss (53%), diarrhea (48%), fatigue (42%) and abdominal pain (36%). | [ | |
| 6. | Africa, Central/South America, Thailand, India, UAE | Group A, B, C | HIV-positive immigrants (≥18), Italian hospital patients | Developing economy, 1,2,3,4 | 11% (15/138) | Serology | Skin problems (16.7%), gastrointestinal symptoms (15%) respiratory problems (14%) | Study conducted from 2000 to 2009 | [ |
| 7. | Sub-Saharan Africa | Group A, B, C | Immigrants, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Infectious disease clinic patients | Developing economy, 1 | 1.4% (2/145) | Stool examination Serology | Not reported | Study conducted from 2003 to 2006 | [ |
| 8. | China, southern Yunnan province *** | Group A | Local rural inhabitants, random population sample | Developing economy, 3 | 11.7% (21/180) | Stool examination | Not reported | [ | |
| 9. | Northern Ghana | Group A | Local inhabitants, random population sample | Developing economy, 2 | 11.6% (2349/20250) | Stool examination | Not reported | Study conducted from 1995 to 1998 | [ |
| 10. | Northern Thailand | Group A,C | Local inhabitants excluding pregnant, lactating or with heart diseases | Developing economy, 3 | 15.9% (114/697) | Stool examination | Study conducted from April 2004 to September 2004 | [ | |
| 11. | Appalachia regions, Kentucky, US *** | Group C,D | Local inhabitants, clinic patients | Developed economy, 4 | 1.9% (7/378) | Serology | Not reported | All used outdoor toilet | [ |
| 12. | Spain, Barcelona | Group C | Immigrants from endemic areas, few locals | Developed economy, 4 | 17.7% (33/190) | Stool examination Serology | Gastrointestinal symptoms (64%), dermatologic symptoms (32%), neurologic symptoms (1%) | Study conducted from 2003 to 2012 | [ |
| 13. | Cambodia | Group A | Refugees | Developing economy, 1 | 24.7% (40/162) | Stool examination Serology | Not reported | Arrived to Canada between 1982 and 1983 | [ |
| 14. | Spain, Valencia, Gandia *** | Group C | Local farm workers, random population sample from the tourist area | Developed economy, 4 | 12.4 % (31/250) | Stool examination (agar plate culture) | Gastrointestinal symptoms, skin symptoms (no predominance among the infected group) | No information obtained on travelling details | [ |
| 15. | Africa | Group A, B, C | Sudan refugees Somali Bantu refugees | Developing economy, 1 | 46% (214/462) | Serology Serology | Chronic abdominal pain (not associated with the infection prevalence) | Resettled in the US in previous 5 years | [ |
| 16. | Jamaica | Group A | Clinical strongyloidiasis patients and controls (neighboring households) | Developing economy, 3 | 8.2% (17/207) | Stool examination Serology | Not reported | [ | |
| 17. | Far East and Southeast Asia | Group A, C, D | Former WWII Far East prisoners, diagnosed with strongyloidiasis and controls | Developing economy, 2,3 | 12% (248/2072) | Stool examination and serology | Larva currens rash (70%) | Study conducted from 1968 to 2002, Liverpool, UK | [ |
| 18. | Sub-Saharan Africa, Maghreb and Latin America | Group A, B, C | Immigrants, strongyloidiasis patients | Developing economy, 2,3 | 90.4% (284/314) | Serology Stool examination | Gastrointestinal symptoms (abdominal pain, diarrhea, pruritus | Study conducted from 2004 to 2012, Southern Spain | [ |
| 19. | Africa, Eastern Europe, Southeast Asia, South America, the Caribbean, and the Middle East | Group A, B, C | Refugees | Developing economy, economy in transition, 1,2,3 | 39% (45/119) | Serology | Asymptomatic | Boston, Massachusetts | [ |
| 20. | Southeast Asia (Kampuchea, Laos, Vietnam | Group A,C | Immigrants, random population sample | Developing economy, 2 | 64.7% (125/193) | Serology Stool examination | Not reported | Quebec, Canada | [ |
| 21. | Spain, Mediterranean coast, | Group C | Strongyloidiasis patients (ex and current farm-workers and family members), local inhabitants | Developed economy 4 | 0.9% (152/16607) | Stool examination (agar plate culture) | Asymptomatic (77%); Gastrointestinal symptoms (11%); cutaneous symptoms (4%); respiratory symptoms (1%); mixture of all the symptoms (7%) | Study conducted from 1990 to 1997, none travelled to the endemic areas | [ |
| 22. | Northeastern Thailand | Group A | Rural and urban population | Developing economy, 3 | 23.5% (289.8/1233) | Stool examination | Not reported | Study conducted from July to September 2002 | [ |
| 23. | Australia, Northern territory *** | Group A | Royal Darwin Hospital patients | Developed economy, 4 | 33% (68/205) | Stool examination | Gastrointestinal symptoms (72%) | 12 month study | [ |
| 24. | India, Assam | Group A,B, C | Local inhabitants, random population sample | Developing economy, 2 | 8.5 % (17/198) | Stool examination | Gastrointestinal, respiratory and cutaneous symptoms (29%) | Locals are mostly farm-workers | [ |
| 25. | Malaysia | Group A | Orang Asli community | Developing economy, 3 | 0% (0/54) | Stool examination Serology PCR | Not reported | [ | |
| 26. | Palestine, Gaza Strip, Beit Lahia | Group B | Local inhabitants, random population sample, 3–18 years | N/a | 5.6% (90/1600) | Stool examination | Not reported | Agricultural region | [ |
| 27. | Brazil, Bahia | Group A, C | AIDS Clinic patients, HIV positive and negative groups, random population sample | Developing economy, 3 | 1.05% (59/5608) | Stool examination | Gastrointestinal symptoms among HIV positive | Study conducted from 1997 to 1999 | [ |
| 28. | Argentina (North) *** | Group C | Local patients at the hospital | Developing economy, 3 | 29.4% (67/228) | Stool examination | Not reported | [ | |
| 29. | U.S. | Group B, C, D | Cancer treated patients | Developed economy, 4 | 0.25% (25/10000) | Stool examination | Fever (28%), gastrointestinal symptoms (68%), pruritic skin rash, | Cases between 1971 and 2003 22/25 are US residents | [ |
| 30. | Northeast Thailand | Group A | Local rural inhabitants | Developing economy, 3 | 28.9% (96/332) 47.5% (57/120) | Stool examination Serology | Not reported | Study conducted between October–November 2000 | [ |
| 31. | Africa (48%), Asia (34%), Caribbean (20%), South America (3%) | Group A, B, C | Immigrants from endemic countries, travelers, Hospital for Tropical Diseases patients | Developing economy, 1,2,3 | 53.1% (102/192) | Stool examination Serology | Bowel upset, gastrointestinal symptoms, skin symptoms | Study conducted between 1991 and 2001, London | [ |
| 32. | Bangladesh, Dhaka | Group A, C | Local inhabitants of a slum | Developing economy, 1 | 23.1% (34/147) | Stool examination Stool examination (agar plate culture) Serology | Diarrhea (19%) | Study conducted from November 2009 to January 2010 | [ |
| 33. | Nigeria, llorin | Group A | HIV clinics patients, HIV seropositive and seronegative patients | Developing economy, 2 | 12.2% (22/180) | Stool examination | Not reported | [ | |
| 34. | Southeastern Brazil, Uberlandia | Group A, C | Elderly, randomly selected from nursing homes and non-institutionalised | Developing economy, 3 | 5% (10/200) | Stool examination | Asymptomatic | [ | |
| 35. | Australia, Queensland, Doomadgee *** | Group B, C | Children in aboriginal communities | Developed economy, 4 | 27.5% (92/334) | Stool examination | Not reported | During the wet season | [ |
| 36. | Northern Cambodia | Group A | Local inhabitants, random population sample | Developing economy, 1 | 44.7% (1071/2396) | Stool examination | Not reported | Farmers (48.5%), pupils (33%) | [ |
| 37. | Kazakhstan *** | Group D | Adopted children, lived in orphanage | Economy in transition, 3 | 42.8% (3/7) | Serology | Not reported | Study in Belgium | [ |
| 38. | USSR, North Caucasus *** | Group D | Local inhabitants, random population sample | Developing economy, 2 | 0.77% (89/11530) | Stool examination | Not reported | [ | |
| 39. | Japan, Okinawa *** | Group B | Local hospital patients | Developed economy, 4 | 3.4% (113/3292) | Stool examination (agar plate culture) | Not reported | [ |
* Koppen climate classification major categories: Group A—tropical moist climate; Group B—subtropical, dry climate; Group C—subtropical, mediterranean, moist mid-latitude climates with mild winters; Group D—continental, moist mid-latitude climates with cold winters; Group E—polar climate; Group H—highland climate; ** Country’s income level categories: 1—low-income; 2—lower-middle-income; 3—upper-middle-income; 4—high-income; *** Strongyloidiasis cases in these countries are shown as a “star” sign on a map in Figure 1.
Figure 1Countries with Strongyloides stercoralis cases (colored blue or marked as a “star” sign) on a world map divided into tropical and subtropical zones.