Environment and Sustainability Institute, University of Exeter, Penryn, UK.
The Carter Center Ethiopia, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
Transbound Emerg Dis. 2021 Mar;68(2):531-542. doi: 10.1111/tbed.13711. Epub 2020 Jul 18.
The global programme for the eradication of Guinea worm disease, caused by the parasitic nematode Dracunculus medinensis, has been successful in driving down human cases, but infections in non-human animals, particularly domestic dogs (Canis familiaris), now present a major obstacle to further progress. Dog infections have mainly been found in Chad and, to a lesser extent, in Mali and Ethiopia. While humans classically acquire infection by drinking water containing infected copepods, it has been hypothesized that dogs might additionally or alternatively acquire infection via a novel pathway, such as consumption of fish or frogs as possible transport or paratenic hosts. We characterized the ecology of free-ranging dogs living in three villages in Gog woreda, Gambella region, Ethiopia, in April-May 2018. We analysed their exposure to potential sources of Guinea worm infection and investigated risk factors associated with infection histories. The home ranges of 125 dogs and their activity around water sources were described using GPS tracking, and the diets of 119 dogs were described using stable isotope analysis. Unlike in Chad, where Guinea worm infection is most frequent, we found no ecological or behavioural correlates of infection history in dogs in Ethiopia. Unlike in Chad, there was no effect of variation among dogs in their consumption of aquatic vertebrates (fish or frogs) on their infection history, and we found no evidence to support hypotheses for this novel transmission pathway in Ethiopia. Dog owners had apparently increased the frequency of clean water provision to dogs in response to previous infections. Variations in dog ranging behaviour, owner behaviour and the characteristics of natural water bodies all influenced the exposure of dogs to potential sources of infection. This initial study suggests that the classical transmission pathway should be a focus of attention for Guinea worm control in non-human animals in Ethiopia.
全球根除麦地那龙线虫病(由寄生性线虫麦地那龙线虫引起)计划已成功降低了人类感染病例,但非人类动物(尤其是家犬)的感染现在成为进一步进展的主要障碍。犬类感染主要在乍得发现,在马里和埃塞俄比亚也有较少的发现。虽然人类经典地通过饮用含有感染性桡足类的水而感染,但人们假设犬类可能通过新途径获得感染,例如食用可能作为运输或副宿主的鱼类或青蛙。我们于 2018 年 4 月至 5 月描述了生活在埃塞俄比亚甘贝拉地区 Gog woreda 的三个村庄的自由放养犬的生态。我们分析了它们接触麦地那龙线虫潜在感染源的情况,并调查了与感染史相关的风险因素。使用 GPS 跟踪描述了 125 只狗的家域及其在水源周围的活动,使用稳定同位素分析描述了 119 只狗的饮食。与在乍得(那里的麦地那龙线虫感染最为普遍)不同,我们在埃塞俄比亚的犬类中没有发现感染史的生态或行为相关性。与乍得不同,犬类对水生脊椎动物(鱼类或青蛙)的消费变化与其感染史无关,我们也没有证据支持在埃塞俄比亚通过这种新的传播途径的假设。犬类主人显然已增加向犬类提供清洁水的频率,以应对以前的感染。犬类活动范围、主人行为和自然水体特征的变化均会影响犬类接触潜在感染源的情况。这项初步研究表明,经典的传播途径应成为埃塞俄比亚控制非人类动物麦地那龙线虫病的重点。