| Literature DB >> 29608589 |
Laura Braun1, Jack E T Grimes1, Michael R Templeton1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Schistosomiasis is one of the most disabling neglected tropical diseases, ranking second in terms of years lived with disability. While treatment with the drug praziquantel can have immediate beneficial effects, reinfection can occur rapidly if people are in contact with cercaria-infested water. Water treatment for schistosomiasis control seeks to eliminate viable cercariae from water, thereby providing safe alternative water supplies for recreational and domestic activities including laundry and bathing. This provision may reduce contact with infested water, which is crucial for reducing reinfection following chemotherapy and cutting schistosome transmission.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29608589 PMCID: PMC5903662 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0006364
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Summary of databases, search limits and paper counts.
| Database | Timespan searched | Oldest paper | Number of results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Web of Science | Inception–Present | 1970 | 282 |
| PubMed | Inception–Present | 1946 | 189 |
| British Library | Inception–Present | 1930 | 592 |
| Google Scholar | Inception– 1950 | 1922 | 25 |
Summary of methods used to assess the effectiveness of water treatment methods.
| Cercarial aspect | Technique | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Presence | Microscope | Used in filtration studies to examine if cercariae can pass filter medium. |
| Motility | Microscope | Evaluates cercarial movement. Time of complete cessation is taken as time of death. |
| Infectivity | Microscope (examine skin attachment/ penetration) | Ability to attach to, and penetrate skin. (Infective cercariae do not necessarily develop into schistosomes.) |
| Viability | Perfusion of adult worms | Ability to penetrate skin and develop into schistosomes, thereby causing schistosomiasis. |
Thermal death points for Schistosoma species.
| Author (year) | Species | Water temperature (°C) | Time until zero surviving cercariae |
|---|---|---|---|
| Krakower (1940) [ | 40 | 6 hours | |
| 42 | 2 hours | ||
| 45 | 30 minutes | ||
| Lawson and Wilson (1980) [ | 45 | 30 minutes | |
| Takaka (1924) [ | 45–46 | 5 minutes | |
| Porter (1938) [ | 45 | 4 hours | |
| 50 | Instant | ||
| Leiper (1915) [ | - | 50 | Instant |
| Khalil (1924) [ | - | 50 | Instant |
| Jones and Brady (1947) [ | 50 | 3 minutes | |
| 55 | 1 minute |
Fig 1Water temperatures and storage times required to reach zero cercarial survival (measured when all cercariae are immobile).
Species are listed in Table 3.
Summary of experimental conditions in filtration studies.
All studies used S. mansoni cercariae.
| Author (year) | Filter medium | Grain size (mm) | Filter depth (m) | Flow rate (m/h) | Cercaria density (l-1) | Conditioning | Cercariae recovered in effluent |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Leiper (1915) [ | Sand | Desert sand | 0.10 | - | - | No | Yes |
| Leiper (1916) [ | Sand | Fine sand | 0.76 | - | - | Yes | Yes |
| Wagner and Lanoix (1959) [ | Sand | Fine sand | 0.60 | 0.22 | - | No | |
| Kawata (1982) [ | Sand | 0.20–0.30 | 1.2 | 0.12–0.4 | 2000 | 1–2 hours | No |
| Fadel (1993) [ | Sand | 0.18–0.37 | 0.80–1.40 | 0.19–0.27 | 10,000 | Up to 40 days | No |
| Witenberg and Yofe (1938) [ | Sand | - | 0.10–0.75 | - | - | Yes | Yes |
| Benarde and Johnson (1971) [ | Sand | 0.19–0.35 | 0.95 | 0.36–1.8 | 290–15,800 | No | No |
| Jones and Brady (1946) [ | Diatomaceous silica | - | - | 2–39 | Up to 4200 | No | No |
Chlorine CT values for selected pathogens, adapted from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2012) [72].
| Pathogen | Residual concentration of chlorine (mg/l) | Chlorine contact time (min) | CT | % Inactivation | Temperature (°C) | pH |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.5 | <0.5 | <0.25 | 99.99% | 23 | 7 | |
| 0.05 | 20 | 1 | 99.2% | 20–25 | 7 | |
| 2.0 | 20 | 40 | 99.99% | 20 | 7 | |
| 15,300 | 99.9% | 25 | 7.5 | |||
| Hepatitis A | 0.41 | <1 | <0.41 | 99.99% | 25 | 8 |
Chlorine concentrations and contact times required to kill all schistosome cercariae in water (measured by cessation of movement).
| Author (year) | Species | Chlorine form | Chlorine dose (mg/l) | Residual chlorine dose (mg/l) | Contact time (min) | Calculated CT value (mg-min/L) | Water characteristics |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Leiper (1915) [ | - | - | 11 | - | Instantly | - | - |
| - | - | 6 | - | 3 | - | - | |
| Leiper (1916) [ | - | - | 2 | - | 30 | - | |
| Manson-Bahr and Fairley (1920) [ | - | - | No cercaricidal effect noticed at 4 mg/l and 2.5 hours | - | - | ||
| Blackmore (1928) [ | Chloramine | 1 | - | 5 | - | Tap water | |
| Bleach | 1 | - | 15 | - | Tap water | ||
| Bleach | 1 | - | 5 | - | Unclarified Nile water | ||
| - | - | 1 | 30 | 30 | - | ||
| Griffiths-Jones | - | 1 | - | 180 | - | Filtered water | |
| Witenberg and Yofe (1938) [ | - | 1 | - | Instantly | - | Clarified river water | |
| - | 0.8 | - | 27 | - | Clarified river water | ||
| Braune (1942) [ | - | 1.5 | - | 15 | - | Tap water | |
| Magath (1942) [ | Calcium hypochlorite | - | 0.1 | 30 | 3 | Rain water | |
| Calcium hypochlorite | 1 | - | 6 | - | Rain water | ||
| González | Calcium hypochlorite | 1 | - | 7 | - | Redistilled water | |
| Calcium hypochlorite | 0.5 | - | 18 | - | Redistilled water | ||
| Calcium hypochlorite | - | 0.5 | 20 | 10 | - | ||
| Jones and Brady (1947) [ | Chloramine | 1 | - | 10 | - | Raw surface water | |
| Calcium hypochlorite | - | 1.67 | 10 | 16.7 | Buffered distilled water | ||
| Calcium hypochlorite | 1.3 | 0.5 | 10 | 5 | Buffered distilled water | ||
| Calcium hypochlorite | 1.4 | 0.75 | 10 | 7.5 | Aquarium water | ||
| Wagner and Lanoix (1959) [ | Chloramine | - | 1 mg/l at 1 min | 10 | - | Filtered water | |
| Calcium hypochlorite | - | 0.75 mg/l at 30 min | 20 | - | Unfiltered water | ||
| Frick and Hillyer (1966) [ | Sodium hypochlorite | 0.3 | - | 30 | - | Tap water pH 5 | |
| Sodium hypochlorite | 0.6 | - | 30 | - | Tap water pH 7.5 | ||
| Sodium hypochlorite | 5 | - | 30 | - | Tap water pH 10 | ||
| World Health Organization (2000) [ | - | - | 1 | 30 | 30 | - | |
Fig 2Lethal chlorine doses for killing 100% of schistosome cercariae.
All studies used motility as a measure of death, and recorded the time at which all cercariae were motionless. Chlorine doses are plotted here because most studies did not report the residual chlorine concentrations. Species are listed in Table 6 and shown in S3 Fig.
Effect of UV disinfection on cercariae and worms.
*All fluences at 254nm.
| Author | Species | UV fluence* (mJ/cm2) | Time (min) | Effect on cercariae | Effect on worm burden |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Krakower (1940) [ | Sunlight | 30 | Severely injured | Not assessed. | |
| Sunlight | 60 | Killed | Not assessed. | ||
| Ariyo and Oyerinde (1990) | - | 0.05 | After 4h, moving cercariae reduced from 69% (control) to 17% | Not assessed. | |
| - | 0.17 | After 4h, moving cercariae reduced from 69% (control) to 9% | After 4 weeks, worm burden reduced to 11% of control | ||
| Standen and Fuller (1959) [ | - | 4 | Killed | Not assessed | |
| Ghandour and Webbe (1975) | - | <0.3 | No effect on movement | No worms recovered | |
| - | 0.5 | Sluggish appearance, severely damaged | - | ||
| - | 3 | Killed (no movement) | - | ||
| Ruppel (1990) | 3 | Not assessed | 50% survival from cercariato worm | ||
| 12 | Not assessed | 1% survival from cercaria to worm | |||
| 60 | Killed | - | |||
| Kumagai | 5 | Not assessed | Disturbs migration potential | ||
| 10 | Not assessed | Hampers migration from skin to lungs | |||
| 18 | Not assessed | No worms recovered in lung and liver | |||
| Kamiya | 18 | 0.67 | Not assessed | Migration reduced to skin | |
| Dean | 19.8 | 3 | Not assessed | No worms recovered | |
| Lin | 24 | 1 | Not assessed | 59% reduction in worm burden | |
| Shi | 24 | 1 | Viability reduced to 0.1% | Reduced by 89%. | |
| Tian | 24 | 1 | Not assessed | Worm burden reduced by 63.84% | |
| Nakamura | 300 | Not assessed | No worms recovered | ||
| Moloney | 1890 | 0.75 | Not assessed | No worms recovered |