Kelly A, Little M D, Voge M
Am J Trop Med Hyg. 1976 Sep;25(5):694-9. doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.1976.25.694.
During the course of a survey of intestinal parasites among the inhabitants of villages along the Fly River in the Kiunga region of Papua New Guinea, eggs of a Strongyloides species were found in the feces of several persons. In subsequent studies, 93 (17.8%) of 520 persons examined from five villages were found to be infected with this parasite. The examination of parasitic and free-living stages of the worm revealed that it is very similar to S. fulleborni, a parasite of monkeys, baboons and apes in Africa and Asia, although a definitive identification could not be made with the material available. Since non-human primates have apparently never inhabited New Guinea, the origin of these S. fulleborni-like infections is unknown.
在对巴布亚新几内亚基翁加地区弗莱河沿岸村庄居民进行肠道寄生虫调查的过程中,在几个人的粪便中发现了一种类圆线虫属的虫卵。在随后的研究中,从五个村庄接受检查的520人中,有93人(17.8%)被发现感染了这种寄生虫。对该蠕虫的寄生阶段和自由生活阶段的检查表明,它与非洲和亚洲猴子、狒狒及猿类的寄生虫富氏类圆线虫非常相似,尽管根据现有材料无法进行明确鉴定。由于非人类灵长类动物显然从未在新几内亚栖息过,这些类似富氏类圆线虫感染的来源尚不清楚。