| Literature DB >> 31092285 |
Philippe Büscher1, Mary Isabel Gonzatti2, Laurent Hébert3, Noboru Inoue4, Ilaria Pascucci5, Achim Schnaufer6, Keisuke Suganuma4, Louis Touratier7, Nick Van Reet8.
Abstract
Equine trypanosomosis is a complex of infectious diseases called dourine, nagana and surra. It is caused by several species of the genus Trypanosoma that are transmitted cyclically by tsetse flies, mechanically by other haematophagous flies, or sexually. Trypanosoma congolense (subgenus Nannomonas) and T. vivax (subgenus Dutonella) are genetically and morphologically distinct from T. brucei, T. equiperdum and T. evansi (subgenus Trypanozoon). It remains controversial whether the three latter taxa should be considered distinct species. Recent outbreaks of surra and dourine in Europe illustrate the risk and consequences of importation of equine trypanosomosis with infected animals into non-endemic countries. Knowledge on the epidemiological situation is fragmentary since many endemic countries do not report the diseases to the World Organisation for Animal Health, OIE. Other major obstacles to the control of equine trypanosomosis are the lack of vaccines, the inability of drugs to cure the neurological stage of the disease, the inconsistent case definition and the limitations of current diagnostics. Especially in view of the ever-increasing movement of horses around the globe, there is not only the obvious need for reliable curative and prophylactic drugs but also for accurate diagnostic tests and algorithms. Unfortunately, clinical signs are not pathognomonic, parasitological tests are not sufficiently sensitive, serological tests miss sensitivity or specificity, and molecular tests cannot distinguish the taxa within the Trypanozoon subgenus. To address the limitations of the current diagnostics for equine trypanosomosis, we recommend studies into improved molecular and serological tests with the highest possible sensitivity and specificity. We realise that this is an ambitious goal, but it is dictated by needs at the point of care. However, depending on available treatment options, it may not always be necessary to identify which trypanosome taxon is responsible for a given infection.Entities:
Keywords: Diagnosis; Dourine; Equine; Nagana; Surra; Trypanosoma brucei; Trypanosoma congolense; Trypanosoma equiperdum; Trypanosoma evansi; Trypanosoma vivax
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31092285 PMCID: PMC6518633 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-019-3484-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Overview of some characteristics of different taxa within the genus Trypanosoma causing equine trypanosomosis
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| Distribution | Sub-Saharan Africa | Africa, Latin America, Middle East, Asia | Worldwide except Oceania USA and Canada | Africa, Latin America | Sub-Saharan Africa |
| Mammalian host range | Multi-species | Multi-species | Equines | Multi-species | Multi-species |
| Transmission | Tsetse | Biting flies, vampire bats, orally (sexually?) | Sexually (orally | Tsetse, biting flies | Tsetse |
| Morphology in the mammalian host | Pleomorphica | Monomorphicb | Monomorphic | Monomorphic | Monomorphic |
| Kinetoplast | Complete | Dyskinetoplasticc or akinetoplasticd | Dyskinetoplastic | Complete or dyskinetoplastic | Complete |
| Kinetoplast minicircle type | A | C or undefined | |||
| ATPase γ C-terminus mutations | A281- | A273P or WT | |||
aPleomorphic: present as long slender, short stumpy and intermediate trypomastigotes during an infection
bMonomorphic: long slender trypomastigotes with anecdotal evidence for partial pleomorphism in T. evansi [35]
cDyskinetoplastic: partial loss of kinetoplast DNA, in particular maxicircle DNA
dAkinetoplastic: complete lack of kinetoplast DNA