| Literature DB >> 32962045 |
Shahira A Ahmed1, Panagiotis Karanis2,3.
Abstract
The present review discusses the burden of cryptosporidiosis in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), which is underreported and underestimated. It emphasizes that the Cryptosporidium parasite is infecting inhabitants and expatriates in the Gulf countries. Children under 5 years are a vulnerable group that is particularly affected by this parasitic disease and can act as carriers, who contribute to the epidemiology of the disease most probably via recreational swimming pools. Various risk factors for cryptosporidiosis in the GCC countries are present, including expatriates, predisposing populations to the infection. Water contamination, imported food, animal contact, and air transmission are also discussed in detail, to address their significant role as a source of infection and, thus, their impact on disease epidemiology in the Gulf countries' populations.Entities:
Keywords: Arabic Gulf; Cryptosporidium; air; animal; food; human; incidence; prevalence; water
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32962045 PMCID: PMC7558405 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17186824
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Results profile of the selected articles.
Reports with details of Cryptosporidium infection in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries and related information.
| Country | Serial No. of Reports | City | Type of Residents | Patients Classification | Most Affected Age | Symptoms | Method of Detection | Prevalence No. of Infected/No. of Total (%) | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bahrain | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | |||
| Kuwait | 1 | Safat | Inhabitants | Children | 4–8 Y | Diarrhoea | MZN, PCR-RFLP | 87/2548 | * (3.4%) | [ |
| 2 | Farwanyia | Inhabitants | Children | >2 Y | Diarrhoea, nausea, vomiting | MSMB, DFA | 51/3549 | (10%) | [ | |
| 3 | Jabryia | NM | Hospitalized patients | NM | Diarrhoea | xTAG GPPA | 1/109 | (0.9%) | [ | |
| 4 | Safat | Inhabitants | Children | 2–3 Y | GIT symptoms mainly diarrhoea | MZN, PCR-RFLP | 58/62 | (94%) | [ | |
| 5 | Farwanyia | NM | ICCT children | <3 Y | Diarrhoea, dehydration, fever, abdominal pain | NM | 35/2205 | (1.6%) | [ | |
| Oman | 1 | Muscat | Expatriates | Food handlers | NM | Asymptomatic | KKT, TS, APFM | 2/100 | (0.2%) | [ |
| 2 | Muscat | Inhabitants and expatriates | Children | <2 Y | Diarrhoea, fever, vomiting | MZN, APFM | 16/807 | (1.9%) | [ | |
| Qatar | 1 | Doha | Inhabitants and expatriates | Hospitalized paediatrics | <2.5 Y | Chronic diarrhoea | q-PCR | 90/580 | (15.5%) | [ |
| 2 | Doha | Expatriates | Immigrants | 23–29 Y | Asymptomatic | q-PCR | 38/839 | (4.5%) | [ | |
| SA | 1 | Dammam and Alkhobar | Inhabitants | Children and adults | 2 Y | Diarrhoea | MZN, APFM | 2/321 | (0.6%) | [ |
| 2 | Al-Taif | Inhabitants | Children and adults | <5 Y | Diarrhoea | MZN, LFIT, Con-PCR | 21/180 | (11.6%) | [ | |
| 3 | Gizan and Madinna | NM | Children | <2 Y | Diarrhoea and asymptomatic | MZN, MSMB, EIA, PCR-RFLP, sequencing | 103/1641 | (6.3%) | [ | |
| 4 | Al-Taif | NM | Children and adults | <5 Y | Acute diarrhoea | xTAG GPPA | 14/163 | (8.5%) | [ | |
| 5 | Dhahran | NM | Various ages | NM | Abdominal symptoms mainly diarrhoea | MZN, DFA | 66/100 | (66%) | [ | |
| 6 | Mekkah | Inhabitants | Children < 14 y | <5 Y | Diarrhoea | MZN, ICT, PCR-RFLP | 23/1380 | (1.7%) | [ | |
| 7 | Jeddah | Inhabitants | Children | <5 Y | Asymptomatic and diarrhoea | MZN | 29/253 | (11.5%) | [ | |
| 8 | Riyadh | NM | HIV patients | 2–10 Y | Diarrhoea and non-diarrhoea | MZN | 11/136 | (8.1%) | [ | |
| 9 | Makkah | NM | People attending clinics around the Holy Masjid | <30 Y | Enteritis | MZN | 5/183 | (2.7%) | [ | |
| 10 | Riyadh | NM | Children <10 y | NM | Diarrhoea | MSMB | 2/174 | (1.1%) | [ | |
| 11 | Hail | NM | School children | NM | Diarrhoea and non-diarrhoea | MZN | 74/200 | (37%) | [ | |
| 12 | Riyadh | Inhabitants | ICP | 16–40 Y | Chronic diarrhoea | MZN, ELISA | 285/408 | (69.9%) | [ | |
| 13 | Riyadh | Inhabitants with few expatriates | In-and out-patients | 0–10 Y | NM | MZN | 6/5987 | (0.1%) | [ | |
| 14 | Al-Taif | NM | Children | <10 Y | NM | MZN, AP-PCR, Sequencing | 11/100 | (11%) | [ | |
| 15 | Jeddah | NM | Children | NM | NM | MZN, APFM, ELISA, Nested PCR, PCR-RFLP | 35/500 | (7%) | [ | |
| UAE | 16 | Hail | Inhabitants and expatriates | Saudi and non-Saudi patients | NM | Asymptomatic | MZN | 25/130 | 19.2% | [ |
| 1 | Sharjah | Expatriates | Adults | ≤25 Y | Asymptomatic | q-PCR | 26/134 | (19.4%) | [ | |
| 2 | Al-Ain | Expatriates | Adults | 30–39 | Asymptomatic | MZN, Con-PCR | 16/86 | (18.6%) | [ | |
| 3 | Al-Ain | NM | ICP and ICTT Children | <5 | Diarrhoea | MZN | 7/140 | (5%) | [ | |
* The prevalence is among children with diarrhoea. NM: Not Mentioned; Y: Years; GPPA: Gastrointestinal Pathogen Panel Assay; KKT: Kato Katz technique; TS: Trichrome stain; DFA: Direct Immunofluorescent Assay; MSMB: Modified Safranine Methylene Blue stain; APFM: Auramine Phenol Fluorescent Method; ELISA: Enzyme Linked Immunosorbent Assay; Con-PCR: Conventional PCR; LFIT: Lateral Flow Immune Test; EIA: Enzyme Immune Assay; ICT: Immunochromatography; HIV: Human Immunodeficiency Virus; ICP: Immune Compromised Patients (organ transplantation, cancer and HIV); ICCT: Immune Competent; AP-PCR: Arbitrarily Primed PCR; PCR-RFLP: Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism; q-PCR: Real Time PCR; ALA: Acute Lymphoblastic Anaemia.
Figure 2Distribution of Cryptosporidium reports in the GCC countries.
Genotyping and subtyping of Cryptosporidium in the reports of the GCC countries.
| Country/City | Target Population | Methods Used | Gene Target | Reported Genotypes | No. of Cases within the Species (%) | Subtypes Allele Family | No. of Cases within Each Allele | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kuwait/Safat | Children with diarrhoea | PCR-RFLP |
18S rRNA |
| 61/83 (73.5%) |
| [ | |
| IIa | 29 | |||||||
|
| 22/83 (26.5%) | IId | 20 | |||||
| IIc | 12 | |||||||
|
| ||||||||
| Mixed “ | 4/83 (4.8%) | Id | 12 | |||||
| Ia | 8 | |||||||
| Ie | 2 | |||||||
| Mixed infection | NI | |||||||
| Kuwait/Safat | Symptomatic children | PCR-RFLP | 18S rRNA Gp60 |
| 58/62 (93.5%) |
| [ | |
| IId | 29 | |||||||
| IIa | 28 | |||||||
|
| 3/62 (4.8%) | IIc | 1 | |||||
| Mixed “ | 1/62 (1.6%) | IIf | 1 | |||||
|
| ||||||||
| Ib | 2 | |||||||
| Id | 1 | |||||||
| Ie | 1 | |||||||
| Qatar/Doha | Hospitalized paediatrics with diarrhoea | qPCR | 18S rRNA Gp60 |
| 83/90 (92.2%) |
| [ | |
|
| 4/90 (4.4%) | IId | 83 | |||||
|
| 1/90 (1.11) |
| ||||||
| Mixed “ | 1/90 (1.11%) | Ib | 4 | |||||
| Mixed “ | 1/90 (1.11%) | |||||||
| Qatar/Doha | Asymptomatic Immigrants | qPCR | 18S rRNA |
| 30/38 (80%) |
| [ | |
|
| 1/38 (2.6%) | IId | 30 | |||||
| Mixed “ | 4/38 (10.5%) |
| ||||||
| Mixed “ | 3/38 (7.9%) | Ie | 1 | |||||
| SA/Makkah | Children with diarrhoea | PCR-RFLP | 18S rRNA |
| (81.1%) | NI | - | [ |
|
| (16.7%) | NI | - | |||||
| SA/Gizan and Maddina | Children with diarrhoea and asymptomatic children | PCR-RFLP |
18S rRNA |
| 79/101 (78.2%) |
| NM | [ |
| IId | ||||||||
|
| 13/101 (12.9%) | IIa | ||||||
| IIc | ||||||||
| Mixed “ | 8/101 (7.92%) |
| NM | |||||
| Ib | ||||||||
| Ie | ||||||||
| SA/Al-Taif | Children form different hospitals and laboratories |
AP-PCR | 18S rRNA |
| 11/100 (11%) | NI | NI | [ |
| SA/Jeddah | Asymptomatic | Nested PCR and PCR-RFLP |
18S rRNA |
| 15/35 (42.9%) | NI | NI | [ |
|
| 13/35 (37%) | |||||||
|
| 1/35 (2.9%) | |||||||
|
| 1/35 (2.9%) |
1 Further sub-classification led to 10 different subtypes; NI: Not Identified; NM: Not Mentioned; PCR-RFLP: Polymerase-Chain-Reaction-Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism; AP-PCR: Arbitrarily primed P.
Detection of Cryptosporidium in water resources of the GCC countries.
| Country/City | Type of Contaminated Water | Method Used | No. of Contaminated/No. of Total | Genotyping/Subtyping | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kuwait/Safat | Overhead water tanks | IFT | 1/5 | 2 | [ |
| SA/Al-Taif | Underground water (UW) from wells | Nested PCR | UW 7/96 | NP | [ |
| Desalinated water (DW) from tanks in private houses | DW 8/72 | ||||
| Bottled water (BW) | BW 0/60 | ||||
| 1 SA/Tabuk | Bottled water | Filtration | 6/36 | NP | [ |
| 1 SA/Mekka and Jeddah | Tap water | Double centrifugation | Schools 13/44 | NP | [ |
| Bottled water | Houses 33/122 | ||||
| Ablution water | Mosques 31/79 | ||||
| UAE/Dubai | School swimming pool | IFT | 5/5 | NP | [ |
| UAE/Dubai | Irrigation water (IW) of public parks | IFT | IW 17/18 | NP | [ |
| Chlorinated water (CW) samples from the sewage treatment plant | CW 5/5 |
1 The results of these studies regarding types of water were marginal. 2 Five members of the same family who lived around this camp suffered from infection with C. parvum subtype IIa. IFT: Immunofluorescence; NP: Not Performed.
Cryptosporidium infection in animals of the GCC countries.
| Country/City | Type of Animal | No. of Infected/No. of Total | Method Used | Genotyping of | Subtyping of | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kuwait/different areas | Sheep | 38/334 | MZN |
| IIdA20G1 | [ |
|
| IIaA15G2R1 | |||||
|
| XIIa | |||||
| Kuwait/Kabd, Salmi, Abdelli and Wafra areas | Calves | 15/40 | MZN | NP | NP | [ |
| Kuwait/Sulaibiya | Newborn calves | 31/80 | MZN | NP | NP | [ |
| 1 Oman/Muscat | Goats | 238/238 | IFT |
| NP | [ |
| SA/Riyadh | Goats | 24/72 | MZN | NP | NP | [ |
| Sheep | 15/58 | |||||
| Camels | 20/49 | |||||
| 2 SA/Riyadh | Camels | 5/33 | NM | NP | NP | [ |
| 2 SA/Riyadh | Arabian Oryx | NM | NM | NP | NP | [ |
| UAE/Dubai | Falcons | 2/2 | MZN |
| NP | [ |
| 1 UAE/Dubai | Stone curlew | 19/29 | MZN | NP | [ |
1 The studies were performed on post-mortem animals due to cryptosporidiosis outbreak. 2 The studies were only available in the form of abstracts with no information on methodology and/or prevalence. NP: Not Performed; NM: Not Mentioned; MZN: Modified Ziehl Nelseen; ICT: Immunochromatography; H&E: Haematoxylin and Eosin stain; TEM: Transmission Electron Microscopy; SEM: Scanning Electron Microscopy; PCR-RFLP: Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism PCR; EIA: Enzymatic Immunoassay; IFT: Immune Fluorescent Technique; ELISA: Enzyme Linked Immune Assay.