Diaz James H, Risher William H
Dr. Diaz is a professor of Public Health and Anesthesiology, Schools of Public Health and Medicine at the LSU Health Sciences Center in New Orleans, LA.
Dr. Risher is an associate professor of Surgery and Head, Cardiothoracic Surgery, School of Medicine, LSU Health Sciences Center, New Orleans, LA.
J La State Med Soc. 2015 Mar-Apr;167(2):79-86. Epub 2015 Apr 15.
Human pulmonary dirofilariasis (HPD) is caused by the transmission of infective third stage larvae of the canine heartworm, Dirofilaria immitis, during blood-feeding by several species of infected mosquitoes. Since humans are incidental hosts and cannot support the parasite's life cycle, infective larvae die after migrating to the pulmonary vascular bed, where an initial subclinical inflammatory reaction is typically followed by a single pulmonary granuloma. The resulting nodular granuloma is described radiographically as a "coin lesion" that resembles a neoplastic lesion, which must be ruled out by invasive lung biopsy. Since HPD cases have been reported mainly from regions with high canine heartworm prevalence, such as the southern United States (US), the objectives of this review were (1) to describe the microbiology of the parasite; (2) to resolve any misconceptions regarding the pathophysiology and outcomes of canine versus human heartworm infections; (3) to describe the prevalence and parasite burden of canine dirofilariasis in the South compared to other areas; (4) to describe the prevalence of HPD in the South; (5) to identify the most important species of mosquito vectors of dirofilariasis based on seroprevalence rates of infection and transmission efficiency; (6) to identify the key risk factors for HPD in the South; and (7) to recommend new strategies for the diagnosis, management, control, and prevention of HPD. Future investigations should focus on targeting specific mosquito species for improved vector control of D. immitis transmission and on developing new immunologic and molecular methods for diagnosing HPD and eliminating the need for invasive diagnostics for differential diagnosis of innocuous, parasitic "coin lesions".
人类肺丝虫病(HPD)是由几种受感染蚊子在吸血过程中传播犬心丝虫(恶丝虫)的感染性三期幼虫引起的。由于人类是偶然宿主,无法支持寄生虫的生命周期,感染性幼虫在迁移到肺血管床后死亡,在此处最初的亚临床炎症反应通常会继发单个肺肉芽肿。由此产生的结节性肉芽肿在影像学上被描述为“硬币病灶”,类似于肿瘤性病变,必须通过侵入性肺活检来排除。由于HPD病例主要报告自犬心丝虫流行率高的地区,如美国南部,本综述的目的是:(1)描述寄生虫的微生物学;(2)解决关于犬类和人类心丝虫感染的病理生理学及结果的任何误解;(3)描述与其他地区相比,南部犬类丝虫病的患病率和寄生虫负荷;(4)描述南部HPD的患病率;(5)根据感染血清阳性率和传播效率确定丝虫病最重要的蚊媒种类;(6)确定南部HPD的关键危险因素;(7)推荐HPD诊断、管理、控制和预防的新策略。未来的研究应集中于针对特定蚊种以改善对恶丝虫传播的媒介控制,以及开发新的免疫和分子方法来诊断HPD,并消除对侵入性诊断进行无害寄生虫“硬币病灶”鉴别诊断的需求。