Dick T A, Nelson P A, Choudhury A
Department of Zoology, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada.
Southeast Asian J Trop Med Public Health. 2001;32 Suppl 2:59-76.
Diphylobothriasis is a well documented disease of humans. On a world scale new infections are reported regularly, especially from Russia and parts of Japan. Globally, new species have been discovered and the etiology of the disease may be changing. Human infections appear to be in decline but it is not clear if the sources of infection are also in decline or if public health awareness has improved. In North America there has been a decline in human cases while in South America an increase in reports from fish, especially salmonids suggests high levels in these fish species. The history of human infections of Diphyllobothrium latum is primarily associated with the consumption of the northern circumpolar distributed pike and percids and is often considered a parasite of humans only. Indeed some researchers believe that D. latum was introduced to North America by northern European immigrants. The more benign human infections of D. dendriticum appears to be primarily associated with salmonids and coregonid fishes and fish eating birds. Although the early cases of diphyllobothriasis in the 1930s in North America came from fish originating in Lake Winnipeg, Manitoba, there was general belief that it was declining in fish populations and therefore of little significance to humans in the area. However, high levels of a plerocercoid in the flesh of walleyes and pike led to rejection of commercially harvested walleye and pike in Manitoba and northern Ontario, Canada, and a financial loss to Aboriginal fishers. D. latum is widely distributed in fishes of Manitoba and is infective to humans where it is not pathogenic and has a life span up to 4.5 years. The distribution and potential infection routes has not changed in a century and is still well established in natural hosts in the boreal regions of North America. Evidence is building for an old pre-European presence in North America, involving the Beringian land bridge and later involvement of susceptible hosts (northern European immigrants).
阔节裂头绦虫病是一种有充分文献记载的人类疾病。在全球范围内,新感染病例时有报告,尤其是来自俄罗斯和日本部分地区。在全球范围内,已发现新的物种,该疾病的病因可能正在发生变化。人类感染似乎在减少,但尚不清楚感染源是否也在减少,或者公众卫生意识是否有所提高。在北美,人类病例有所减少,而在南美,鱼类尤其是鲑科鱼类报告病例的增加表明这些鱼类物种中的感染水平较高。人类感染阔节裂头绦虫的历史主要与食用分布于北极圈北部的狗鱼和鲈形目鱼类有关,通常被认为仅是人类的寄生虫。事实上,一些研究人员认为阔节裂头绦虫是由北欧移民引入北美的。曼氏裂头绦虫对人类危害较小的感染似乎主要与鲑科鱼类、白鲑科鱼类以及食鱼鸟类有关。尽管20世纪30年代北美早期的阔节裂头绦虫病病例来自马尼托巴省温尼伯湖的鱼类,但人们普遍认为该疾病在鱼类种群中正在减少,因此对该地区的人类意义不大。然而,白斑狗鱼和狗鱼体内大量的裂头蚴导致加拿大马尼托巴省和安大略省北部商业捕捞的白斑狗鱼和狗鱼被拒收,给原住民渔民造成了经济损失。阔节裂头绦虫广泛分布于马尼托巴省的鱼类中,对人类具有感染性,但在人体内不致病,寿命可达4.5年。其分布和潜在感染途径在一个世纪内没有改变,在北美北方地区的天然宿主中仍然广泛存在。越来越多的证据表明,在欧洲人到来之前,阔节裂头绦虫就已存在于北美,涉及白令陆桥,后来易感宿主(北欧移民)也参与其中。