| Literature DB >> 29587811 |
Felipe Penagos-Tabares1,2, Malin K Lange3, Jenny J Chaparro-Gutiérrez4, Anja Taubert3, Carlos Hermosilla3.
Abstract
The gastropod-borne nematodes Angiostrongylus vasorum and Aelurostrongylus abstrusus are global causes of cardio/pulmonary diseases in dogs and cats. In the last decade, the number of reports on canine and feline lungworms has increased in several areas of Europe and North America. The unspecific clinical signs and prolonged course of these diseases often renders diagnosis challenging. Both infections are considered as emerging and underestimated causes of disease in domestic pets. In South America, little information is available on these diseases, apart from occasional reports proving the principle presence of A. vasorum and A. abstrusus. Thus, the purpose of this review is to summarize reports on infections in both domestic and wildlife animals in South America and to increase the awareness on gastropod-borne metastrongyloid parasites, which also include important zoonotic species, such as A. cantonensis and A. costaricensis. This review highlights the usefulness of diagnostic tools, such as the Baermann funnel technique, serology and PCR, and proposes to include these routinely on cases with clinical suspicion for lungworm infections. Future national epidemiological surveys are recommended to be conducted to gain a deeper insight into the actual epidemiological situation of gastropod-borne parasitoses in South America.Entities:
Keywords: Aelurostrongylus abstrusus; Angiostrongylus vasorum; Gastropod-borne diseases; Lungworms; Metastrongyloidea
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29587811 PMCID: PMC5870519 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-018-2765-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Reports on Angiostrongylus vasorum infections in definitive hosts in South America
| Definitive host species | Geographical location | No. of cases | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Gioás and Angra Dos Reis, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | 1 | Travassos, 1927 [ |
|
| Brazil | na | Dougherty, 1946 [ |
|
| Colombia and Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil | 1 | Gonçalves, 1961 [ |
|
| Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | na | Langenegger et al., 1962 [ |
|
| Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | na | Grisi, 1971 [ |
|
| Paraná, Brazil | na | Giovannoni et al, 1985 [ |
|
| Minas Gerais, Brazil | na | dos Santos et al., 1985 [ |
|
| Argentina | na | Venturini & Borel, 1991 [ |
| Minas Gerais, Brazil | 4/8 | Lima et al., 1994 [ | |
|
| Bolivian Chaco | 1/10 | Fiorello et al., 2006 [ |
|
| Minas Gerais, Brazil | 3/6 | Duarte et al., 2007. [ |
|
| Paraná, Brazil | 1 | Vieira et al., 2008 [ |
|
| Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil | 1 | Vieira et al., 2008 [ |
|
| Pereira, Colombia | 1 | Varela-Arias et al., 2014 [ |
|
| Federal District, Midwestern Brazil | 1 | Ferreira-Júnior et al., 2017 [ |
|
| Minas Gerais, Brazil | 2 | Viera et al., 2017 [ |
Abbreviation: na, not applicable
Fig. 1Reports of natural occurring infections of Angiostrongylus vasorum and Aelurostrongylus abstrusus in South America
Reports on Aelurostrongylus abstrusus infections in definitive and intermediate hosts
| Geographical location | Prevalence/no. of cases | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Definitive host species | |||
|
| Montevideo, Uruguay | 1 case | Bacigalupo et al., 1942 [ |
|
| Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil | 40/102 | Trein, 1953 [ |
|
| Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | na | Langenegger and Lanzieri, 1963 [ |
|
| Montevideo, Uruguay | 8.6% | Esteves et al., 1961 [ |
|
| Chile | 1 case | Gonzalez & Torres, 1971 [ |
|
| São Paulo, Brazil | na | Campedelli-Filho, 1972 [ |
|
| Valdivia, Chile | na | Torres et al., 1972 [ |
|
| Sâo Paulo, Brazil | 8.5% | Fenerich et al., 1975 [ |
|
| Valdivia, Chile | na | Bonilla-Zepeda, 1980 [ |
|
| La Plata, and Buenos Aires Argentina | 24.3%, 30.0% | Idiart et al., 1986 [ |
|
| Corrientes, Argentina | 30% | Martinez et al., 1990 [ |
|
| Rosario, Argentina | na | Schiaffi et al., 1995 [ |
|
| Santa Maria, Brazil | na | Headley & Conrado, 1997 [ |
|
| Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil | na | Noronha et al., 2002 [ |
|
| Bogota, Colombia | 1 case | Salamanca, 2003 [ |
|
| Uberlândia, Brazil | 18% | Mundim et al., 2004 [ |
|
| Santa Maria, Brazil | 5.9–25% (mean 18.6%, 1987–1996) | Headley, 2005 [ |
|
| Buenos Aires, Argentina | 2.6% | Sommerfelt et al., 2006 [ |
|
| Bolivian Chaco | 5 cases | Fiorello et al., 2006 [ |
|
| 3 cases | ||
|
| Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | 1 case | Ferreira et al., 2007 [ |
|
| Quindío, Colombia | 0.21% (1/121) | Echeverry et al., 2012 [ |
|
| Cuiaba and Várzea Grande, Matto Grosso, Brazil | 1.3% | Ramos et al., 2013 [ |
|
| Montevideo, Uruguay | 2/8 | Castro et al., 2013 [ |
|
| Río Bueno y La Unión, Provincia del Ranco, Chile | 20/200 | Oyarzún-Cadagán, 2013 [ |
|
| Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil | 29.5% | Ehlers et al., 2013 [ |
|
| Buenos Aires, Argentina | 35.3% (6/17) | Cardillo et al., 2014 [ |
| Natural park De Trê Barras, Três Barras, Brazil | 38.1% , 35.7% | Kusma et al., 2015 [ | |
|
| Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil | 1 case | Gressler et al., 2016 [ |
|
| Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil | 22/2036 (1998–2005) | Pereira et al., 2017 [ |
|
| Caquetá, Colombia | 1 case | Sanchez-Rojas et al., 2017 [ |
| Intermediate host species | |||
|
| Rio de Janeiro, Goiás, Espırito Santo, Mato grosso, Sergippe and São Paulo, Brazil | 5.57% (217/3806) | Thiengo et al, 2008 [ |
|
| São Paulo, Brazil | na | Ohlweiler et al., 2010 [ |
|
| Puerto Iguazu, Argentina | 2% | Valente et al., 2017 [ |
|
| Buenos Aires, Argentina | 80% (20/25) | Cardillo et al., 2014 [ |
Abbreviations: na, not applicable
Fig. 2Illustration of modified Baermann funnel techniques. This technique is considered as the gold standard for the diagnosis of lungworm infections in cat and dog faeces. a A household funnel is combined with a plastic tube of 10 cm length and closed by a metal tubing clamp. The funnel is filled with handwarm tap-water. Then a wire mesh screen (9 cm diameter, 0.20–0.25 mm aperture) has to be set in the top of the funnel. b Modification by Conboy et al. [104]: instead of a funnel, 50 ml screw-top centrifuge tubes containing warm tap water are used. The faeces need to be placed in a double layer of cheesecloth, placed in the tube and the cap is screwed onto the tube catching a small part of the cheesecloth to keep it in place at the top at the tube. (Pictures taken by Malin K. Lange, Institute of Parasitology, Justus-Liebig-University Giessen)
Fig. 3Morphological characteristics of first-stage larvae of Angiostrongylus vasorum and Aelurostrongylus abstrusus. a The first-stage larvae of A. vasorum possess a sinus wave curve formed tail end with a dorsal spine. b The first-stage larvae of A. abstrusus can be identified by the notched S-shaped tail. (Pictures taken by Malin K. Lange, Institute of Parasitology, Justus-Liebig-University Giessen)
Canid and felid cardiopulmonary nematodes: differential characters of fisrt-stage larvae found by the Baermann funnel technique
| Nematode (length × width) (μm) | Morphological keys | Final host | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| A small cup as a cephalic button emerges on the oral extremity | Canids | [ | |
| Oesophagus non-rhabditiform, 1/3–1/2 the length of the larva | |||
| Tip with a dorsal spine and sinus wave curve | |||
| Oesophagus non-rhabditiform, 1/3–1/2 the length of the larva | Canids | [ | |
| Tail, pointed and straight, without indentations and entirely pointed | |||
| Anterior extremity slender, with a short/terminal oral opening leading into a narrow vestibule | Felids | [ | |
| Oesophagus non-rhabditiform, 1/3–1/2 the length of the larva | |||
| Tail S-shaped, with visible dorsal kink, distinct deep dorsal, ventral incisures, a terminal knob-like extremity | |||
| Anterior extremity clear and pointed, with a sub-terminal oral opening | Felids | [ | |
| Oesophagus non-rhabditiform, 1/3–1/2 the length of the larva | |||
| Tail gradually tapered to dorsal incision, dividing the extremity into two appendices (shallow ventral one, slender dorsal one). S-shaped tail is not obvious, ending straight, gradually tapered | |||
| Head pointed, oral opening subterminal (dorsal) | Felids | [ | |
| Oesophagus non-rhabditiform, 1/3–1/2 the length of the larva | |||
| Tail gradually tapered to the extremity with deep dorsal incisure and shallower ventral incisure | |||
| Head rounded, with a central oral opening and a cylindrical buccal capsule | Felids | [ | |
| Oesophagus non-rhabditiform, 1/3–1/2 the length of the larva | |||
| Tail slightly undulated, with a deep ventral notch (ending in minuscule spine) and a shallow dorsal notch | |||
| Cephalic extremity rounded, with a terminal buccal opening | Felids | [ | |
| Oesophagus non-rhabditiform, 1/3–1/2 the length of the larva | |||
| Caudal extremity with a small dorsal spine and notch, ending in a short sigmoid tail | |||
|
| ? | Felids | [ |
| Mouth with six lips, mouth-cavity rhabditiform, 1/20–1/21 of the total length of oesophagus | Felids and canids | [ | |
| Oesophagus rhabditiform (corpus, isthmus, valvulated bulb), 1/4 of the total length of the larva | |||
| Pointed and straight tail |
aEurope and North America; unique report in South America (1% prevalence in dogs) in Chile [80]
bNot reported in South America
cDescribed in 2013 in Puma yagouaroundi from Brazil, first-stage larvae have been not described (Viera et al. [118])