Rotureau Brice
Laboratoire Hospitalo-universitaire de Parasitologie et Mycologie Médicale, Equipe EA 3593, Unité de Formation et de Recherche en Médecine de l'Université des Antilles et de la Guyane, Campus Saint-Denis, BP 718, 97336 Cayenne, French Guiana.
Med Hypotheses. 2006;67(5):1235-41. doi: 10.1016/j.mehy.2006.02.056. Epub 2006 Jun 23.
In the New World, leishmaniases are originally wild exoanthropic zoonoses developing in sylvatic ecotopes. For a long time, Leishmania parasites have shown a remarkable plasticity to face modifications in their environment. Now, both geographical extension and numerical increase of leishmaniasis cases in the New World are giving cause for concern. These circumstances might have been provoked by the simple invasion of zoonotic foci by humans. However, dramatic evolutionary mechanisms are also at work in the New World: (i) the reduction of biodiversity associated with anthropogenic environmental changes (deforestation and urbanization); and (ii) the subsequent adaptations and interactions of new vectors and reservoir hosts at the interface with humans. This paper considers that these processes could result in new pathogenic complexes tending to synanthropic zoonoses, if not anthroponoses. Increasing man-made risk factors could thus possibly make leishmaniases a growing public health concern in the New World.
在新大陆,利什曼病最初是在野生生态环境中发展起来的野生外源性人畜共患病。长期以来,利什曼原虫寄生虫在面对环境变化时表现出了显著的可塑性。如今,新大陆利什曼病病例的地理范围扩大和数量增加令人担忧。这些情况可能是由人类对人畜共患病疫源地的简单侵入所引发的。然而,在新大陆也有显著的进化机制在起作用:(i)与人为环境变化(森林砍伐和城市化)相关的生物多样性减少;以及(ii)新的媒介和储存宿主在与人类接触界面处随后的适应和相互作用。本文认为,如果这些过程不导致人兽共患病,那么它们可能会导致新的致病复合体趋向于适应人类环境的人畜共患病。因此,越来越多的人为风险因素可能会使利什曼病成为新大陆日益严重的公共卫生问题。