| Literature DB >> 29065126 |
Camila Henriques Coelho1, Maurício Durigan2, Diego Averaldo Guiguet Leal3, Adriano de Bernardi Schneider4, Regina Maura Bueno Franco5, Steven M Singer1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Giardiasis is an intestinal infection that affects more than two hundred million people annually worldwide; it is caused by the flagellated protozoan Giardia duodenalis. In tropical countries and in low or middle-income settings, like Brazil, its prevalence can be high. There is currently no systematic review on the presence of G. duodenalis in patients, animals or water sources in Brazil.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29065126 PMCID: PMC5678545 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0006005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Detection of G. duodenalis cysts in water sources derived through different regions of Brazil.
Only studies using the membrane filtration technique and immunofluorescence or molecular assays are included.
| Water Source | City | Filtered Volume | Number of Samples | Frequency of Positivity | Range of Number of cysts/L | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Surface water | Campinas (São Paulo) | 0.5L | 03 | 100.0% | 33.0–95.0 | [ |
| Surface water | Campinas (São Paulo) | 1L | 08 | 87.5% | 2.5–120 | [ |
| Surface water | Porto Said and Santa Maria da Serra | 5L | 28 | 0 | A | [ |
| Surface water; treated water | Maringá (Paraná) | 1,000L | 15 (surface water); 15 (treated water) | 19.9% (surface water); A (treated water) | 0.026–0.2 | [ |
| Surface water; treated water | Londrina (Paraná) | 30L (raw water); 100L (treated water) | 24 (surface water); 24 (treated water) | 8.3% (raw water); 0 (treated water) | 0.42–4.2 | [ |
| Surface water; spring water | Piracicaba, São Lourenço da Serra, São Paulo (São Paulo) | 10L | 11 (surface water); 1 (spring water) | 36.3% (surface water); 0 (spring) | NA | [ |
| Spring water | Campos do Jordão (São Paulo) | 20L | 72 | 2.7% | 0.07–0.1 | [ |
| Brackish/estuarine water | Cananéia (São Paulo) | 1L – 10L | 44 | 18.1% - 36.3% (according to sampling site) | NA | [ |
| Bottled mineral water | Campinas (São Paulo) | 1.5L – 2.0L | 26 | 0 | A | [ |
| Seawater | Florianópolis (Santa Catarina) | 1L – 10L | 04 | 25.0% | NA | [ |
| Groundwater (rural area) | Maringá (Paraná) | 100L | 40 (from artesian wells; 40 (from commons wells); 01 (of mine) | 0 | A | [ |
* = nongaseous mineral waters
A = Absence on IFA (immunofluorescence assay)
NA = not applicable; positive by PCR (Polymerase Chain Reaction)
= Samples purified by ImmunoMagnetic Separation (IMS)
Fig 1Proportion of studies of G. duodenalis in Brazil performed in different animal hosts.
Fig 4Brazilian states with more than 30% of prevalence of giardiasis in a population density map.
Yellow areas in the map reflect population density. The blue circles show the states with more than 30% in prevalence of giardiasis: Amapá, Maranhão, Minas Gerais, Sergipe, São Paulo and Paraná. The information regarding to prevalence of giardiasis was obtained from studies identified at S1 Table and the Brazilian map was adapted from Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (https://www.ibge.gov.br/) with population density data from Census obtained in 2010. North region comprises the following states: Acre, Amapá, Amazonas, Pará, Rondônia, Roraima and Tocantins. Northeast states are Alagoas, Bahia, Ceará, Maranhão, Paraíba, Piauí, Pernambuco, Rio Grande do Norte and Sergipe. Midwest region comprises: Goiás, Mato Grosso, Mato Grosso do Sul and Federal District. Southeast states are Minas Gerais, Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo and Espírito Santo. Finally, South region is formed by Paraná, Santa Catarina and Rio Grande do Sul state.
Fig 6Giardia duodenalis transmission network based on sequences available for partial beta-giardin (n = 144).
Solid Line/N = Non-Ambiguous Changes. Dotted line/A = Ambiguous Changes. Bolder solid lines indicate relatively more host shifts within route on the transmission graph. Number in parentheses represents number of shifts within tree from one host to another.
Fig 7Giardia duodenalis transmission network based on sequences available for partial tpi (n = 148).
Solid Line/N = Non-Ambiguous Changes. Dotted line/A = Ambiguous Changes. Bolder solid lines indicate relatively more host shifts within route on the transmission graph. Number in parentheses represents number of shifts within tree from one host to another.
Fig 8Giardia duodenalis transmission network based on sequences available for partial gdh (n = 342).
Solid Line/N = Non-Ambiguous Changes. Dotted line/A = Ambiguous Changes. Bolder solid lines indicate relatively more host shifts within route on the transmission graph. Number in parentheses represents number of shifts within tree from one host to another.
Result of each database search for the terms «Giardia» and «Brazil».
Searches for articles in Portuguese, English, Spanish and French were made using four databases, including the Brazilian SciELO.
| Database | Hits | After Exclusion and Duplicates |
|---|---|---|
Brazilian isolates sequences available on NCBI for bg, gdh and tpi genes.
Isolate sequences were extracted from Genbank or NCBI database.
| Gene | Isolates | Isolation Sources | Categories |
|---|---|---|---|
1- Isolation Sources = Original hosts before standardized into categories.
2- Categories: Non-Human primates, Farm animals, Dogs, Cats, Humans, Environmental Samples, Wildlife and Animals
Detection of G. duodenalis assemblages in human hosts across Brazil according to molecular studies performed using the gdh, tpi, bg and 18S parasite genes.
- Methods used for each analysis include: 1- Sequence analysis of fragments; 2- Single-vessel multiplex real-time PCR (qPCR); 3- Restriction fragment length polymorphisms and DNA sequencing; 4- Allele-specific PCR; 5- Sequencing, Phylogenetic reconstruction and analysis of genealogical relationships.
| Assemblages identified | Brazilian state | Genes investigated | Genotyping approach | Authors |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AII (78.4%) | São Paulo | glutamate | 1 | [ |
| A (15%) | Ceará | 18S rRNA | 2 | [ |
| AI (69.5%) AII(30.5%) | São Paulo | beta-giardin | 1 | [ |
| AI (96.7%) AII(3,3%) | São Paulo | beta-giardin | 3 | [ |
| B (100%) | Minas Gerais | glutamate | 1 | [ |
| (AI) single sample study | Minas Gerais | rRNA | 4 | [ |
| AI (16.6%) | São Paulo | glutamate | 3 | [ |
| For HSP: A (100%) | Paraná | heat shock protein [HSP] and beta-giardin | 3 | [ |
| A(45%) | São Paulo | beta-giardin, glutamate | 5 | [ |
| AI (5.2%) | São Paulo | beta-giardin, glutamate | 1 | [ |
| AI (100%) | São Paulo | beta-giardin | 3 | [ |
| AI (3.7%) | Paraná | beta-giardin and | 3 | [ |
Prevalence of giardiasis found in indigenous population in Brazil.
The table shows the indigenous tribe, the localization of the tribe across the country, prevalence, number of individuals enrolled in each study and the year of publication.
| Indigenous tribe | Brazilian state | Prevalence of | Number of individuals in the study | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Minas Gerais | 43.7% (adults) | 23 | [ | |
| Amazonas | 10.7% (adults) | 313 | [ | |
| Paraná | 44.8%(1992)/21.2%(1995) (adults) | 22/30 | [ | |
| Mato Grosso do Sul | 23% (children and adults) | 134 | [ | |
| Minas Gerais | 16.6% (children and adults) | 60 | [ | |
| Rio Grande do Sul | 28.6% (children)/ | 42/20 | [ |