| Literature DB >> 32448703 |
Jairo A Mendoza-Roldan1, David Modry2, Domenico Otranto3.
Abstract
Reptiles are reservoirs of a wide range of pathogens, including many protozoa, helminths, pentastomids, and arthropod parasitic species, some of which may be of public health concern. In this review we discuss the zoonotic risks associated with human-reptile interactions. Increased urbanization and introduction of exotic species of reptile may act as drivers for the transmission of zoonotic parasites through the environment. In addition, being a part of human diet, reptiles can be a source of life-threatening parasitoses, such as pentastomiasis or sparganosis. Finally, reptiles kept as pets may represent a risk to owners given the possibility of parasites transmitted by direct contact or fecal contamination. Awareness of reptile-borne zoonotic parasitoses is important to advocate control, prevention, and surveillance of these neglected diseases.Entities:
Keywords: food-borne; pentastomiasis; reptile pet trade; sparganosis; vector-borne; zoonotic parasites
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32448703 PMCID: PMC7203055 DOI: 10.1016/j.pt.2020.04.014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trends Parasitol ISSN: 1471-4922
Figure 1Transmission Pathways of Main Reptile-Borne Zoonotic Parasitic Diseases.
Representation of the main transmission modalities of reptile-borne zoonotic parasitic diseases that are (A) food-borne, (B) transmitted by direct contact with feces, (C) spread through environmental contamination, and (D) vector-borne. The most representative parasites for each pathway are also illustrated: (E) Spirometra spp., (F) egg of Armillifer spp., (G), Leishmania spp.
Zoonotic Parasites of Reptiles Grouped According to the Modality of Transmission
| Pathogens (zoonosis) | Geographic origin of reports | Reptile hosts | Categories of zoonotic importance | Main clinical signs in humans | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Protozoa | |||||
| Spain | Lizards | UI | Diarrhea | [ | |
| Italy | Snakes, lizards and turtles | UI | Acute to persistent diarrhea | [ | |
| Mainly Southeast Asia | Snakes | LI | Muscular sarcocystosis | [ | |
| Asia | Lizards, snakes | UI | Unknown | [ | |
| Africa | Monitor lizards | UI | Unknown | see | |
| Cestoda | |||||
| Americas, Europe, Asia, Australia | Snakes | HI | Blindness, paralysis, death | [ | |
| Pentastomida | |||||
| Asia, Africa | Snakes | HI | Organ damage by larvae | [ | |
| SE Asia | Lizards | LI | Subcutaneous pentastomiasis | [ | |
| Nematoda | |||||
| Worldwide | Crocodiles, | LI | Fever, myalgia, gastrointestinal symptoms | [ | |
| Worldwide | Crocodiles | UI | Eosinophilic granulomas | [ | |
| Worldwide | Crocodiles | UI | No specific symptoms recorded so far | [ | |
| Africa, Asia, Central America | Snakes (but mainly fish) | LI | Cutaneous or visceral larvae migrans symptoms | [ | |
| Subtropics | Monitor lizards | HI | Eosinophilic meningitis | [ | |
| Trematoda | |||||
| Asia | Turtles and crocodiles | LI | Catarrhal inflammation | [ | |
| Ixodida | |||||
| Africa, Asia | Monitor lizards, tortoises, snakes | LI | Dermatitis and VBDs | [ | |
| Australia | Snakes, lizards | HI | Vector of Flinders Island spotted fever | [ | |
| Europe, Africa, Asia | Lizards, viperid snakes | LI | Dermatitis and VBDs | [ | |
| Africa | Tortoises | LI | Dermatitis and VBDs | [ | |
| Europe, North America | Snakes, lizards | HI | Dermatitis and VBDs | [ | |
| Africa, North America | Tortoises and viperid snakes | LI | Dermatitis and VBDs | [ | |
| Mesostigmata | |||||
| Worldwide | Snakes, lizards | LI | Dermatitis | [ | |
| Prostigmata | |||||
| Americas | Snakes, lizards, turtles | LI | Dermatitis | [ | |
| Europe | Lizards, snakes | HI | Dermatitis | [ | |
Zoonotic importance categorized as follows: high importance (HI): causing severe or lethal cases in humans clearly associated with reptiles; low importance (LI): causing human cases that are likely linked to reptiles, even though rare or accidental; unknown importance (UI): possibly zoonotic parasites that were isolated from reptiles (including spurious parasites) but causative link of reptiles to a human disease was not proved.
For a full reference list see Box S1 in the supplemental information online.
Figure 2Representative Examples of Reptile-Borne Zoonotic Parasites.
Endoparasites and ectoparasites of reptiles causing zoonotic diseases through (A) direct contact with feces (Sarcocystis singaporensis), (B) infestation by ticks from the environment (white arrow is a nymph of Ixodes ricinus), (C) ingestion of contaminated food (Spirometra spp. in subcutaneous tissue), or (D) chigger mites (Eutrombicula alfreddugesi) from the environment.