Ebhodaghe F, Ohiolei J A, Isaac C
Department of Zoology, Ambrose Alli University, Ekpoma, Nigeria.
Lanzhou Veterinary Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Lanzhou, China.
Acta Trop. 2018 Dec;188:118-131. doi: 10.1016/j.actatropica.2018.08.034. Epub 2018 Sep 1.
The appraisal of the disease burden of African animal trypanosomiasis (AAT) in some livestock at country level could invite a re-evaluation of trypanosomiasis-control strategy. This study thus estimates small ruminant and porcine trypanosomiasis prevalence in sub-Saharan African countries. It also describes Trypanosoma species prevalence in small ruminants and pigs and attempts identification of factors explaining between-study variations in prevalence. Articles reporting animal trypanosomiasis prevalence in sheep, goats, and pigs in countries within sub-Saharan Africa were retrieved from different databases (PubMed, Science Direct, Google Scholar, and African Journal Online) and reference lists of relevant literatures. A total of 85 articles from 13 countries published between 1986 and 2018 were included in the analysis. Overall random-effects meta-analytic mean prevalence estimates were: 7.67% (95% CI: 5.22-10.49), 5.84% (95% CI: 3.81-8.23), and 19.46% (95% CI: 14.61-24.80) respectively, for sheep, goats, and pigs with substantial heterogeneity (I = >95.00%. p < 0.0001) noted between studies. Ovine, caprine, and porcine prevalence were highest in Tanzania (91.67%. 95% CI: 76.50-99.84), Equatorial Guinea (27%. 95% CI: 0-81.09), and Cameroon (47%. 95% CI: 29.67-66.06), respectively. Trypanosoma brucei s. l., T. vivax, and T. congolense were the most prevalent in the livestock. Trypanosoma brucei subspecies (T. b. gambiense and T. b. rhodesiense) occurred in all three livestock being mostly prevalent in pigs. Country of study was a significant predictor of trypanosomiasis prevalence in each livestock in addition to time and sample size for caprine hosts, diagnostic technique for both caprine and ovine hosts, and sample size for porcine hosts. The pattern of animal trypanosomiasis prevalence in the studied livestock reflects their susceptibility to trypanosomal infections and tsetse fly host feeding preferences. In conclusion, sheep, goats, and especially pigs are reservoirs of human infective trypanosomes in sub-Saharan Africa; consequently, their inclusion in sleeping sickness control programmes could enhance the goal of the disease elimination.
在国家层面评估某些家畜的非洲动物锥虫病(AAT)疾病负担,可能会促使对锥虫病控制策略进行重新评估。因此,本研究估算了撒哈拉以南非洲国家小型反刍动物和猪的锥虫病患病率。它还描述了小型反刍动物和猪体内锥虫种类的患病率,并试图找出解释研究间患病率差异的因素。从不同数据库(PubMed、Science Direct、Google Scholar和African Journal Online)以及相关文献的参考文献列表中检索了报告撒哈拉以南非洲国家绵羊、山羊和猪锥虫病患病率的文章。分析纳入了1986年至2018年间13个国家发表的85篇文章。总体随机效应荟萃分析的患病率估计值分别为:绵羊7.67%(95%置信区间:5.22 - 10.49)、山羊5.84%(95%置信区间:3.81 - 8.23)、猪19.46%(95%置信区间:14.61 - 24.80),研究间存在显著异质性(I>95.00%,p<0.0001)。绵羊、山羊和猪的患病率在坦桑尼亚最高(91.67%,95%置信区间:76.50 - 99.84)、赤道几内亚(27%,95%置信区间:0 - 81.09)和喀麦隆(47%,95%置信区间:29.67 - 66.06)分别最高。布氏锥虫复合种、活泼锥虫和刚果锥虫在这些家畜中最为常见。布氏锥虫亚种(冈比亚布氏锥虫和罗德西亚布氏锥虫)在所有三种家畜中均有出现,在猪中最为普遍。除了时间、山羊宿主的样本量、山羊和绵羊宿主的诊断技术以及猪宿主的样本量外,研究国家是每种家畜锥虫病患病率的重要预测因素。所研究家畜中动物锥虫病的患病率模式反映了它们对锥虫感染的易感性以及采采蝇宿主的摄食偏好。总之,绵羊、山羊,尤其是猪是撒哈拉以南非洲人类感染性锥虫的储存宿主;因此,将它们纳入昏睡病控制计划可以提高消除该疾病的目标。