Traub Rebecca J, Robertson Ian D, Irwin Peter J, Mencke Norbert, Thompson R C A Andrew
World Health Organization Collaborating Centre for the Molecular Epidemiology of Parasitic Infections, School of Veterinary and Biomedical Sciences, Murdoch University, South Street, Murdoch 6150, Australia.
Trends Parasitol. 2005 Jan;21(1):42-8. doi: 10.1016/j.pt.2004.10.011.
Although well recognized and studied in developed countries, canine parasitic zoonoses pose a lowly prioritized public health problem in developing countries such as India, where conditions are conducive for transmission. A study of the most recent parasite survey determining prevalence and epidemiology of canine parasitic zoonoses among tea-growing communities of northeast India demonstrated the endemicity of the problem. This particular study serves as a model using conventional, as well as molecular parasitological, tools to provide novel insights into the role of dogs as mechanical transmitters of human parasites such as Ascaris and Trichuris, and discusses the risks dogs pose with regards to zoonotic transmission of hookworms and Giardia.
尽管犬类寄生虫人畜共患病在发达国家已得到充分认识和研究,但在印度等发展中国家,它却是一个未被高度重视的公共卫生问题,而这些国家的环境有利于疾病传播。一项关于最新寄生虫调查的研究,确定了印度东北部茶叶种植社区中犬类寄生虫人畜共患病的流行情况和流行病学,证明了该问题的地方性。这项特别的研究作为一个范例,运用传统以及分子寄生虫学工具,为狗作为蛔虫和鞭虫等人类寄生虫的机械传播者的作用提供了新的见解,并讨论了狗在钩虫和贾第虫人畜共患传播方面所带来的风险。