Brighton and Sussex Medical School, Falmer, Brighton BN1 9PS, UK.
Int J Health Geogr. 2014 Jun 20;13:24. doi: 10.1186/1476-072X-13-24.
The precise trigger of podoconiosis - endemic non-filarial elephantiasis of the lower legs - is unknown. Epidemiological and ecological studies have linked the disease with barefoot exposure to red clay soils of volcanic origin. Histopathology investigations have demonstrated that silicon, aluminium, magnesium and iron are present in the lower limb lymph node macrophages of both patients and non-patients living barefoot on these clays. We studied the spatial variation (variations across an area) in podoconiosis prevalence and the associated environmental factors with a goal to better understanding the pathogenesis of podoconiosis.
Fieldwork was conducted from June 2011 to February 2013 in 12 kebeles (administrative units) in northern Ethiopia. Geo-located prevalence data and soil samples were collected and analysed along with secondary geological, topographic, meteorological and elevation data. Soil data were analysed for chemical composition, mineralogy and particle size, and were interpolated to provide spatially continuous information. Exploratory, spatial, univariate and multivariate regression analyses of podoconiosis prevalence were conducted in relation to primary (soil) and secondary (elevation, precipitation, and geology) covariates.
Podoconiosis distribution showed spatial correlation with variation in elevation and precipitation. Exploratory analysis identified that phyllosilicate minerals, particularly clay (smectite and kaolinite) and mica groups, quartz (crystalline silica), iron oxide, and zirconium were associated with podoconiosis prevalence. The final multivariate model showed that the quantities of smectite (RR = 2.76, 95% CI: 1.35, 5.73; p = 0.007), quartz (RR = 1.16, 95% CI: 1.06, 1.26; p = 0.001) and mica (RR = 1.09, 95% CI: 1.05, 1.13; p < 0.001) in the soil had positive associations with podoconiosis prevalence.
More quantities of smectite, mica and quartz within the soil were associated with podoconiosis prevalence. Together with previous work indicating that these minerals may influence water absorption, potentiate infection and be toxic to human cells, the present findings suggest that these particles may play a role in the pathogenesis of podoconiosis and acute adenolymphangitis, a common cause of morbidity in podoconiosis patients.
导致 Podoconiosis(下肢地方性非血丝丝虫性象皮病)的确切诱因尚不清楚。流行病学和生态学研究表明,该病与赤足接触火山成因的红粘土有关。组织病理学研究表明,硅、铝、镁和铁存在于赤足生活在这些粘土上的患者和非患者的下肢淋巴结巨噬细胞中。我们研究了 Podoconiosis 患病率的空间变化(在一个区域内的变化)以及相关的环境因素,目的是更好地了解 Podoconiosis 的发病机制。
实地工作于 2011 年 6 月至 2013 年 2 月在埃塞俄比亚北部的 12 个 Kebeles(行政单位)进行。收集了地理定位的患病率数据和土壤样本,并对其进行了分析,同时还分析了次要的地质、地形、气象和海拔数据。对土壤数据进行了化学成分、矿物学和颗粒大小分析,并进行了插值,以提供空间连续的信息。对 Podoconiosis 患病率与主要(土壤)和次要(海拔、降水和地质)协变量进行了探索性、空间、单变量和多变量回归分析。
Podoconiosis 的分布与海拔和降水的变化呈空间相关性。探索性分析表明,层状硅酸盐矿物,特别是粘土(蒙脱石和高岭石)和云母组、石英(结晶二氧化硅)、氧化铁和锆石与 Podoconiosis 患病率有关。最终的多变量模型表明,土壤中蒙脱石(RR = 2.76,95%CI:1.35,5.73;p = 0.007)、石英(RR = 1.16,95%CI:1.06,1.26;p = 0.001)和云母(RR = 1.09,95%CI:1.05,1.13;p < 0.001)的数量与 Podoconiosis 患病率呈正相关。
土壤中蒙脱石、云母和石英的含量增加与 Podoconiosis 患病率有关。结合之前的研究表明,这些矿物质可能影响水分吸收,促进感染,对人体细胞有毒,本研究结果表明,这些颗粒可能在 Podoconiosis 和急性腺淋巴管炎(Podoconiosis 患者常见的发病原因)的发病机制中发挥作用。