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一种亚马逊寄生虫如何成为因纽特人的健康问题。

: How an Amazonian parasite became an Inuit health issue.

作者信息

Reiling S J, Dixon B R

机构信息

Bureau of Microbial Hazards, Food Directorate, Health Canada, Ottawa, ON.

出版信息

Can Commun Dis Rep. 2019 Jul 4;45(7-8):183-190. doi: 10.14745/ccdr.v45i78a03.

Abstract

is a protozoan parasite that originated in the Amazon. Felids (mammals in the cat family) are the only definitive hosts. These animals shed large numbers of infectious oocysts into the environment, which can subsequently infect many intermediate hosts, including birds, mammals and, possibly, fish. Human seroprevalence is high in some parts of the Canadian Arctic and is associated with adverse health consequences among Inuit population. Since the range of felids does not extend to the Arctic, it is not immediately obvious how this parasite got from the Amazon to the Arctic. The objectives of this overview are to summarize the health impacts of infection in Inuit in Canada's North and to consider how this infection could have reached them. This article reviews the prevalence of infection in terrestrial and marine animals in the Canadian Arctic and discusses their potential role in the foodborne transmission of this parasite to humans. Two distribution factors seem plausible. First, felids in more southern habitats may release infectious oocysts into waterways. As these oocysts remain viable for months, they can be transported northward via rivers and ocean currents and could infect Arctic fish and eventually the marine mammals that prey on the fish. Second, migratory terrestrial and marine intermediate hosts may be responsible for carrying tissue cysts to the Arctic, where they may then pass on the infection to carnivores. The most likely source of in Inuit is from consumption of traditionally-prepared country foods including meat and organs from intermediate hosts, which may be consumed raw. With climate change, northward migration of felids may increase the prevalence of in Arctic wildlife.

摘要

是一种起源于亚马逊地区的原生动物寄生虫。猫科动物(猫科哺乳动物)是唯一的终末宿主。这些动物会向环境中释放大量具有传染性的卵囊,随后这些卵囊可能会感染许多中间宿主,包括鸟类、哺乳动物,甚至可能还有鱼类。在加拿大北极地区的一些地方,人类血清阳性率很高,并且与因纽特人群的不良健康后果有关。由于猫科动物的活动范围并未延伸至北极地区,所以这种寄生虫是如何从亚马逊地区传播到北极地区的,目前还不太明确。本综述的目的是总结感染对加拿大北部因纽特人的健康影响,并探讨这种感染是如何传播到他们身上的。本文回顾了加拿大北极地区陆地和海洋动物中的感染流行情况,并讨论了它们在这种寄生虫通过食物传播给人类过程中的潜在作用。有两个传播因素似乎是合理的。首先,生活在更南部栖息地的猫科动物可能会将具有传染性的卵囊释放到水道中。由于这些卵囊可以存活数月,它们可以通过河流和洋流向北运输,并可能感染北极鱼类,最终感染捕食这些鱼类的海洋哺乳动物。其次,迁徙的陆地和海洋中间宿主可能会将组织囊肿带到北极地区,然后在那里将感染传播给食肉动物。因纽特人感染的最可能来源是食用传统烹制的乡村食物,包括来自中间宿主的肉和器官,这些食物可能是生的。随着气候变化,猫科动物向北迁徙可能会增加北极野生动物中的感染率。

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