Natural Resources Institute, University of Greenwich at Medway, Central Avenue, Chatham Maritime, Chatham, Kent ME4 4TB, UK.
Acta Trop. 2013 Jan;125(1):43-52. doi: 10.1016/j.actatropica.2012.09.002. Epub 2012 Sep 17.
Onchocerciasis in savanna zones is generally more severe than in the forest and pathologies also differ geographically, differences often ascribed to the existence of two or more strains and incompatibilities between vectors and strains. However, flies in the forest transmit more infective larvae than their savanna counterparts, even in sympatry, contradicting expectations based on the forest and savanna strains paradigm. We analysed data on the numbers of Onchocerca volvulus larvae of different stages found in 10 different taxonomic categories of the Simulium damnosum complex derived from more than 48,800 dissections of flies from Sierra Leone in the west of Africa to Uganda in the east. The samples were collected before widespread ivermectin distribution and thus provide a baseline for evaluating control measures. Savanna species contained fewer larvae per infected or per infective fly than the forest species, even when biting and parous rates were accounted for. The highest transmission indices were found in the forest-dwelling Pra form of Simulium sanctipauli (616 L3/1000 parous flies) and the lowest in the savanna-inhabiting species S. damnosum/S. sirbanum (135) and S. kilibanum (65). Frequency distributions of numbers of L1-2 and L3 larvae found in parous S. damnosum/S. sirbanum, S. kilibanum, S. squamosum, S. yahense, S. sanctipauli, S. leonense and S. soubrense all conformed to the negative binomial distribution, with the mainly savanna-dwelling species (S. damnosum/S. sirbanum) having less overdispersed distributions than the mainly forest-dwelling species. These infection patterns were maintained even when forest and savanna forms were sympatric and biting the same human population. Furthermore, for the first time, levels of blindness were positively correlated with infection intensities of the forest vector S. yahense, consistent with relations previously reported for savanna zones. Another novel result was that conversion rates of L1-2 larvae to L3s were equivalent for both forest and savanna vectors. We suggest that either a multiplicity of factors are contributing to the observed disease patterns or that many parasite strains exist within a continuum.
在稀树草原地区,盘尾丝虫病通常比森林地区更为严重,且病理学也存在地域差异,这些差异通常归因于存在两种或更多种菌株以及媒介和菌株之间的不相容性。然而,即使在同域共存的情况下,森林中的苍蝇传播的感染性幼虫也多于其稀树草原对应的苍蝇,这与基于森林和稀树草原菌株模式的预期相矛盾。我们分析了来自塞拉利昂西部到乌干达东部的 10 个不同的塞姆利基姆属复合体分类群的超过 48800 只苍蝇解剖数据,这些数据涉及不同阶段的旋盘尾丝虫幼虫数量。这些样本是在广泛分布伊维菌素之前收集的,因此为评估控制措施提供了一个基线。稀树草原物种中,每只感染或每只感染性苍蝇携带的幼虫数量均少于森林物种,即使考虑了叮咬和产卵率也是如此。在森林栖息的 Pra 形式的 Simulium sanctipauli(616 只 L3/1000 产卵苍蝇)中发现的传播指数最高,而在稀树草原栖息的 Simulium damnosum/S. sirbanum(135)和 S. kilibanum(65)中发现的传播指数最低。在产卵的 S. damnosum/S. sirbanum、S. kilibanum、S. squamosum、S. yahense、S. sanctipauli、S. leonense 和 S. soubrense 中发现的 L1-2 和 L3 幼虫数量的频率分布均符合负二项分布,主要栖息在稀树草原的物种(S. damnosum/S. sirbanum)的分布比主要栖息在森林的物种(S. damnosum/S. sirbanum)的分布具有更小的过度分散度。即使在森林和稀树草原形式共存并叮咬同一人群时,这些感染模式仍然存在。此外,这是首次发现森林传播媒介 S. yahense 的感染强度与失明水平呈正相关,这与先前报道的稀树草原地区的关系一致。另一个新结果是,L1-2 幼虫向 L3 转化的转化率在森林和稀树草原传播媒介中是相等的。我们认为,可能有多种因素导致了观察到的疾病模式,或者许多寄生虫菌株存在于一个连续体中。