Prince Leopold Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium.
BMC Infect Dis. 2011 Jul 18;11:198. doi: 10.1186/1471-2334-11-198.
Schistosomiasis is one of the major parasitic diseases in the world in terms of people infected and those at risk. Infection occurs through contact with water contaminated with larval forms of the parasite, which are released by freshwater snails and then penetrate the skin of people. Schistosomiasis infection and human water contact are thus essentially linked, and more knowledge about their relationship will help us to develop appropriate control measures. So far, only few studies have related water contact patterns to infection levels.
We have conducted detailed direct water contact observations in a village in Northern Senegal during the first years of a massive Schistosoma mansoni outbreak to determine the role of human water contact in the extent of the epidemic.We quantified water contact activities in terms of frequency and duration, and described how these vary with age and sex. Moreover, we assessed the relationship between water contact- and infection intensity patterns to further elucidate the contribution of exposure to the transmission of schistosomiasis.
This resulted in over 120,000 recorded water contacts for 1651 subjects over 175 observation days. Bathing was the main activity, followed by household activities. Frequency and duration of water contact depended on age and sex rather than season. Water contacts peaked in adolescents, women spent almost twice as much time in the water as men, and water contacts were more intense in the afternoon than in the morning, with sex-specific intensity peaks. The average number of water contacts per person per day in this population was 0.42; the average time spent in the water per person per day was 4.3 minutes.
The observed patterns of water contact behavior are not unusual and have been described before in various other settings in sub-Saharan Africa. Moreover, water contact levels were not exceptionally high and thus cannot explain the extremely high S. mansoni infection intensities as observed in Northern Senegal. Comparison with fecal egg counts in the respective age and sex groups further revealed that water contact levels did not unambiguously correspond with infection levels, indicating that factors other than exposure also play a role in determining intensity of infection.
就感染人数和感染风险而言,血吸虫病是世界上主要的寄生虫病之一。感染是通过与受幼虫形式寄生虫污染的水接触而发生的,这些幼虫是由淡水蜗牛释放的,然后穿透人体皮肤。因此,血吸虫病感染和人类与水的接触本质上是相关的,更多地了解它们之间的关系将有助于我们制定适当的控制措施。到目前为止,只有少数研究将水接触模式与感染水平联系起来。
我们在塞内加尔北部的一个村庄进行了详细的直接水接触观察,以确定人类与水接触在血吸虫病流行程度中的作用。我们根据频率和持续时间来量化水接触活动,并描述了这些活动如何随年龄和性别而变化。此外,我们评估了水接触和感染强度模式之间的关系,以进一步阐明暴露在传播血吸虫病中的作用。
这导致在 175 个观察日中,对 1651 名受试者记录了超过 120000 次水接触。沐浴是主要活动,其次是家务活动。水接触的频率和持续时间取决于年龄和性别,而与季节无关。水接触在青少年中达到高峰,女性在水中的时间几乎是男性的两倍,下午的水接触比早上更强烈,具有特定性别的强度高峰。该人群中每人每天的平均水接触次数为 0.42;每人每天在水中的平均时间为 4.3 分钟。
所观察到的水接触行为模式并不罕见,以前在撒哈拉以南非洲的各种其他环境中也有描述。此外,水接触水平并不特别高,因此不能解释在塞内加尔北部观察到的极其高的曼氏血吸虫感染强度。与相应年龄和性别组的粪便虫卵计数进行比较进一步表明,水接触水平与感染水平没有明确对应,表明除了暴露之外,其他因素也在决定感染强度方面发挥作用。