Lim Y A L, Ahmad R A, Smith H V
Department of Parasitology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya, 50603, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
J Water Health. 2008 Jun;6(2):239-54. doi: 10.2166/wh.2008.023.
Cryptosporidium and Giardia are major causes of diarrhoeal diseases of humans worldwide, and are included in the World Health Organisation's 'Neglected Diseases Initiative'. Cryptosporidium and Giardia occur commonly in Malaysian human and non-human populations, but their impact on disease, morbidity and cost of illness is not known. The commonness of contributions from human (STW effluents, indiscriminate defaecation) and non-human (calving, lambing, muck spreading, slurry spraying, pasturing/grazing of domestic animals, infected wild animals) hosts indicate that many Malaysian environments, particularly water and soil, are sufficiently contaminated to act as potential vehicles for the transmission of disease. To gain insight into the morbidity and mortality caused by human cryptosporidiosis and giardiasis, they should be included into differential diagnoses, and routine laboratory testing should be performed and (as for many infectious diseases) reported to a centralised public health agency. To understand transmission routes and the significance of environmental contamination better will require further multidisciplinary approaches and shared resources, including raising national perceptions of the parasitological quality of drinking water. Here, the detection of Cryptosporidium and Giardia should be an integral part of the water quality requirement. A multidisciplinary approach among public health professionals in the water industry and other relevant health- and environment-associated agencies is also required in order to determine the significance of Cryptosporidium and Giardia contamination of Malaysian drinking water. Lastly, adoption of validated methods to determine the species, genotype and subgenotype of Cryptosporidium and Giardia present in Malaysia will assist in developing effective risk assessment, management and communication models.
隐孢子虫和贾第虫是全球人类腹泻疾病的主要病因,被纳入世界卫生组织的“被忽视疾病倡议”。隐孢子虫和贾第虫在马来西亚的人类和非人类群体中普遍存在,但它们对疾病、发病率和疾病成本的影响尚不清楚。人类(污水处理厂废水、随意排便)和非人类(产犊、产羔、施肥、喷洒粪肥、家畜放牧/吃草、感染的野生动物)宿主的常见排泄物表明,马来西亚的许多环境,特别是水和土壤,受到了足够的污染,可作为疾病传播的潜在媒介。为了深入了解人类隐孢子虫病和贾第虫病所导致的发病率和死亡率,应将它们纳入鉴别诊断,并进行常规实验室检测,且(如同许多传染病一样)向中央公共卫生机构报告。为了更好地理解传播途径和环境污染的重要性,将需要进一步的多学科方法和共享资源,包括提高国家对饮用水寄生虫学质量的认识。在此,隐孢子虫和贾第虫的检测应成为水质要求的一个组成部分。水行业的公共卫生专业人员以及其他相关的健康和环境相关机构之间也需要采取多学科方法,以确定马来西亚饮用水中隐孢子虫和贾第虫污染的重要性。最后,采用经过验证的方法来确定马来西亚存在的隐孢子虫和贾第虫的种类、基因型和亚型,将有助于开发有效的风险评估、管理和沟通模型。