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1.
Infect Dis Poverty ; 11(1): 70, 2022 Jun 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35717331

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Due to sustained control activities, the prevalence of Schistosoma japonicum infection in humans, livestock and snails has decreased significantly in P. R. China, and the target has shifted from control to elimination according to the Outline of Healthy China 2030 Plan. Applying highly sensitive methods to explore the presence of S. japonicum infection in its intermediate host will benefit to assess the endemicity or verify the transmission interruption of schistosomiasis accurately. The aim of this study was to access the presence of S. japonicum infection by a loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) method through a 5-year longitudinal study in five lake provinces along the Yangtze River. METHODS: Based on previous epidemiological data, about 260 villages with potential transmission risk of schistosomiasis were selected from endemic counties in five lake provinces along the Yangtze River annually from 2015 to 2019. Snail surveys were conducted in selected villages by systematic sampling method and/or environmental sampling method each year. All live snails collected from field were detected by microscopic dissection method, and then about one third of them were detected by LAMP method to assess the presence of S. japonicum infection with a single blind manner. The infection rate and nucleic acid positive rate of schistosomes in snails, as well as the indicators reflecting the snails' distribution were calculated and analyzed. Fisher's exact test was used to examine any change of positive rate of schistosomes in snails over time. RESULTS: The 5-year survey covered 94,241 ha of environment with 33,897 ha of snail habitats detected accumulatively. Totally 145.3 ha new snail habitats and 524.4 ha re-emergent snail habitats were found during 2015-2019. The percentage of frames with snails decreased from 5.93% [45,152/761,492, 95% confidence intervals (CI): 5.88-5.98%] in 2015 to 5.25% (30,947/589,583, 95% CI: 5.19-5.31%) in 2019, while the mean density of living snails fluctuated but presented a downward trend generally from 0.20 snails/frame (155,622/761,492, 95% CI: 0.17-0.37) in 2015 to 0.13 snails/frame (76,144/589,583, 95% CI: 0.11-0.39) in 2019. A total of 555,393 live snails were collected, none of them was positive by dissection method. Totally 17 pooling snail samples were determined as positives by LAMP method among 8716 pooling samples with 174,822 of living snails, distributed in 12 villages of Hubei, Hunan, Jiangxi and Anhui provinces. The annual average positive rate was 0.41% (95% CI: 0.13-0.69%) in 2015, 0% in 2016, 0.36% (95% CI: 0.09-0.63%) in 2017, 0.05% (95% CI: 0-0.16%) in 2018, 0.05% (95% CI: 0-0.15%) in 2019, respectively, presenting a downward trend from 2015 to 2019 with statistical significance (χ2 = 11.64, P < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: The results suggest that S. japonicum infection still persisted in nature along the Yangtze River and traditional techniques might underestimate the prevalence of schistosomiasis in its intermediate hosts. Exploring and integrating molecular techniques into national surveillance programme could improve the sensitivity of surveillance system and provide guidance on taking actions against schistosomiasis.


Subject(s)
Schistosoma japonicum , Schistosomiasis japonica , Schistosomiasis , Animals , China/epidemiology , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Rivers , Schistosoma , Schistosoma japonicum/genetics , Schistosomiasis/epidemiology , Schistosomiasis japonica/epidemiology , Schistosomiasis japonica/prevention & control , Single-Blind Method
2.
Pathogens ; 10(12)2021 Nov 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34959493

ABSTRACT

Schistosomiasis is a water-borne parasitic disease distributed worldwide, while schistosomiasis japonica localizes in the People's Republic of China, the Philippines, and a few regions of Indonesia. Although significant achievements have been obtained in these endemic countries, great challenges still exist to reach the elimination of schistosomiasis japonica, as the occurrence of flooding can lead to several adverse consequences on the prevalence of schistosomiasis. This review summarizes the influence of flooding on the transmission of schistosomiasis japonica and interventions responding to the adverse impacts from the One Health perspective in human beings, animals, and the environment. For human and animals, behavioral changes and the damage of water conservancy and sanitary facilities will increase the intensity of water contact. For the environment, the density of Oncomelania snails significantly increases from the third year after flooding, and the snail habitats can be enlarged due to active and passive diffusion. With more water contact of human and other reservoir hosts, and larger snail habitats with higher density of living snails, the transmission risk of schistosomiasis increases under the influence of flooding. With the agenda set for global schistosomiasis elimination, interventions from the One Health perspective are put forward to respond to the impacts of increased flooding. For human beings, conducting health education to increase the consciousness of self-protection, preventive chemotherapy for high-risk populations, supply of safe water, early case finding, timely reporting, and treating cases will protect people from infection and prevent the outbreak of schistosomiasis. For animals, culling susceptible domestic animals, herding livestock in snail-free areas, treating livestock with infection or at high risk of infection, harmless treatment of animal feces to avoid water contamination, and monitoring the infection status of wild animals in flooding areas are important to cut off the transmission chain from the resources. For the environment, early warning of flooding, setting up warning signs and killing cercaria in risk areas during and post flooding, reconstructing damaged water conservancy facilities, developing hygiene and sanitary facilities, conducting snail surveys, using molluscicide, and predicting areas with high risk of schistosomiasis transmission after flooding all contribute to reducing the transmission risk of schistosomiasis. These strategies need the cooperation of the ministry of health, meteorological administration, water resources, agriculture, and forestry to achieve the goal of minimizing the impact of flooding on the transmission of schistosomiasis. In conclusion, flooding is one of the important factors affecting the transmission of schistosomiasis japonica. Multi-sectoral cooperation is needed to effectively prevent and control the adverse impacts of flooding on human beings, animals, and the environment.

3.
Vaccine ; 26(18): 2260-9, 2008 Apr 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18375021

ABSTRACT

This was a randomized safety/immunogenicity evaluation of PCV7 primary series at 3, 4, 5 months in healthy Chinese infants. Eight hundred subjects were randomized to Group 1 (PCV7 > or =7 days before DTaP), or Group 2 (PCV7 with DTaP), or Group 3 (DTaP only). Erythema and induration/swelling were recorded at the PCV7 injection site at any individual dose in no more than 12% and 8% of subjects, respectively, and neither exceeded 2.5 cm in >1% of subjects. Fever >38.0 degrees C was observed in <13% of subjects at any individual dose. For each vaccine serotype, at least 90% of subjects (Groups 1 and 2) had IgG concentrations > or = 0.35 microg/mL after dose 3, except type 6B (Group 2) with 83.3%. PCV7 had an acceptable safety profile and was immunogenic in Chinese infants.


Subject(s)
Diphtheria-Tetanus-acellular Pertussis Vaccines/administration & dosage , Meningococcal Vaccines/adverse effects , Meningococcal Vaccines/immunology , Pneumococcal Vaccines/adverse effects , Pneumococcal Vaccines/immunology , Antibodies, Bacterial/blood , Asian People , Erythema , Female , Fever , Heptavalent Pneumococcal Conjugate Vaccine , Humans , Immunoglobulin G/blood , Infant , Male , Meningococcal Vaccines/administration & dosage , Pneumococcal Vaccines/administration & dosage , Time Factors
4.
Article in Chinese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16121012

ABSTRACT

Differential expression of genes in young fruit of cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.) before/after pollination was investigated via cDNA amplified fragment length polymorphism (cDNA-AFLP). There were 64 transcript-derived fragments (TDFs) displayed specially in young fruits after pollination of 6-72 h (Table 1), five of which were verified to be mainly expressed in young fruits by reverse Northern dot blotting (Fig.2). Sequence data showed one TDF was a new gene encoding expansin and was named as Cs-Expansin10 (CsExp10), which might be related to the expanding growth of cucumber fruit after pollination (Fig.3), another was significantly similar to the glutathione reductase gene, and the others had no similar sequence in GenBank database (Table 2).


Subject(s)
Cucumis sativus/genetics , Gene Expression Profiling , Pollination/genetics , Amino Acid Sequence , Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphism Analysis , Base Sequence , Blotting, Northern , Cucumis sativus/growth & development , Cucumis sativus/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Molecular Sequence Data , Plant Proteins/genetics , Pollination/physiology , Sequence Alignment
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