| Literature DB >> 29126460 |
Risto Pietikäinen1, Stig Nordling2, Sakari Jokiranta3, Seppo Saari4, Petra Heikkinen5, Chris Gardiner6, Anne-Marie Kerttula7, Tiina Kantanen8, Anna Nikanorova9, Sauli Laaksonen4, Antti Lavikainen3, Antti Oksanen10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The spread of vector-borne diseases to new regions has become a global threat due to climate change, increasing traffic, and movement of people and animals. Dirofilaria repens, the canine subcutaneous filarioid nematode, has expanded its distribution range northward during the last decades. The northernmost European locations, where the parasite life-cycle has been confirmed, are Estonia and the Novgorod Region in Russia.Entities:
Keywords: Autochthonous infection; Climate change; Dirofilariosis; Vector-borne nematodes; Zoonosis
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29126460 PMCID: PMC5681764 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-017-2499-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Fig. 1The northernmost Dirofilaria repens infections found reported. See text for further information of the reports. 1, Hamina (61°N, 27°E); 2, Vyborg (61°N, 20°E); 3, St Petersburg (60°N, 30°E); 4, Tartu (58°N, 27°E); 5, Novgorod Oblast (58°N, 33°E); 6, Arkhangelsk (65°N, 41°E); 7, Yakutsk (62°N, 130°E)
Fig. 2Histopathology as seen in the subcutaneous lesion (a and b) and microfilaria found in the blood smear (c) from the human patient, a 70 year-old female. A diffuse dermal inflammatory infiltrate composed of eosinophilic granulocytes and histiocytes surrounding an adult female filarioid nematode can be observed in (a). The area in the rectangle is enlarged in (b). A cuticle with evenly spaced external longitudinal cuticular ridges, a musculature of coelomyarian type, a small intestine and a paired uterus filled with microfilariae were considered typical of Dirofilaria spp. Haematoxylin-eosin stained histological section. A microfilaria possessing three nuclei in a large cephalic space (arrow) can be observed in (c). Abbreviations: cut, cuticle; mus, musculature; in, intestine; ut, uterus; mf, microfilariae. Scale-bars: a, 100 μm; b, 50 μm