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1.
Nature ; 619(7971): 782-787, 2023 Jul.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37438520

RESUMEN

Many communities in low- and middle-income countries globally lack sustainable, cost-effective and mutually beneficial solutions for infectious disease, food, water and poverty challenges, despite their inherent interdependence1-7. Here we provide support for the hypothesis that agricultural development and fertilizer use in West Africa increase the burden of the parasitic disease schistosomiasis by fuelling the growth of submerged aquatic vegetation that chokes out water access points and serves as habitat for freshwater snails that transmit Schistosoma parasites to more than 200 million people globally8-10. In a cluster randomized controlled trial (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT03187366) in which we removed invasive submerged vegetation from water points at 8 of 16 villages (that is, clusters), control sites had 1.46 times higher intestinal Schistosoma infection rates in schoolchildren and lower open water access than removal sites. Vegetation removal did not have any detectable long-term adverse effects on local water quality or freshwater biodiversity. In feeding trials, the removed vegetation was as effective as traditional livestock feed but 41 to 179 times cheaper and converting the vegetation to compost provided private crop production and total (public health plus crop production benefits) benefit-to-cost ratios as high as 4.0 and 8.8, respectively. Thus, the approach yielded an economic incentive-with important public health co-benefits-to maintain cleared waterways and return nutrients captured in aquatic plants back to agriculture with promise of breaking poverty-disease traps. To facilitate targeting and scaling of the intervention, we lay the foundation for using remote sensing technology to detect snail habitats. By offering a rare, profitable, win-win approach to addressing food and water access, poverty alleviation, infectious disease control and environmental sustainability, we hope to inspire the interdisciplinary search for planetary health solutions11 to the many and formidable, co-dependent global grand challenges of the twenty-first century.


Asunto(s)
Agricultura , Ecosistema , Salud Rural , Esquistosomiasis , Caracoles , Animales , Niño , Humanos , Esquistosomiasis/epidemiología , Esquistosomiasis/prevención & control , Esquistosomiasis/transmisión , Caracoles/parasitología , África Occidental , Fertilizantes , Especies Introducidas , Intestinos/parasitología , Agua Dulce , Plantas/metabolismo , Biodiversidad , Alimentación Animal , Calidad del Agua , Producción de Cultivos/métodos , Salud Pública , Pobreza/prevención & control , Organismos Acuáticos/metabolismo , Tecnología de Sensores Remotos
2.
Front Public Health ; 9: 642895, 2021.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34336754

RESUMEN

In recent decades, computer vision has proven remarkably effective in addressing diverse issues in public health, from determining the diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment of diseases in humans to predicting infectious disease outbreaks. Here, we investigate whether convolutional neural networks (CNNs) can also demonstrate effectiveness in classifying the environmental stages of parasites of public health importance and their invertebrate hosts. We used schistosomiasis as a reference model. Schistosomiasis is a debilitating parasitic disease transmitted to humans via snail intermediate hosts. The parasite affects more than 200 million people in tropical and subtropical regions. We trained our CNN, a feed-forward neural network, on a limited dataset of 5,500 images of snails and 5,100 images of cercariae obtained from schistosomiasis transmission sites in the Senegal River Basin, a region in western Africa that is hyper-endemic for the disease. The image set included both images of two snail genera that are relevant to schistosomiasis transmission - that is, Bulinus spp. and Biomphalaria pfeifferi - as well as snail images that are non-component hosts for human schistosomiasis. Cercariae shed from Bi. pfeifferi and Bulinus spp. snails were classified into 11 categories, of which only two, S. haematobium and S. mansoni, are major etiological agents of human schistosomiasis. The algorithms, trained on 80% of the snail and parasite dataset, achieved 99% and 91% accuracy for snail and parasite classification, respectively, when used on the hold-out validation dataset - a performance comparable to that of experienced parasitologists. The promising results of this proof-of-concept study suggests that this CNN model, and potentially similar replicable models, have the potential to support the classification of snails and parasite of medical importance. In remote field settings where machine learning algorithms can be deployed on cost-effective and widely used mobile devices, such as smartphones, these models can be a valuable complement to laboratory identification by trained technicians. Future efforts must be dedicated to increasing dataset sizes for model training and validation, as well as testing these algorithms in diverse transmission settings and geographies.


Asunto(s)
Esquistosomiasis , África Occidental , Animales , Humanos , Redes Neurales de la Computación , Schistosoma , Esquistosomiasis/epidemiología , Senegal
3.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis ; 14(7): e0008417, 2020 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32628666

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Schistosomiasis is responsible for the second highest burden of disease among neglected tropical diseases globally, with over 90 percent of cases occurring in African regions where drugs to treat the disease are only sporadically available. Additionally, human re-infection after treatment can be a problem where there are high numbers of infected snails in the environment. Recent experiments indicate that aquatic factors, including plants, nutrients, or predators, can influence snail abundance and parasite production within infected snails, both components of human risk. This study investigated how snail host abundance and release of cercariae (the free swimming stage infective to humans) varies at water access sites in an endemic region in Senegal, a setting where human schistosomiasis prevalence is among the highest globally. METHODS/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We collected snail intermediate hosts at 15 random points stratified by three habitat types at 36 water access sites, and counted cercarial production by each snail after transfer to the laboratory on the same day. We found that aquatic vegetation was positively associated with per-capita cercarial release by snails, probably because macrophytes harbor periphyton resources that snails feed upon, and well-fed snails tend to produce more parasites. In contrast, the abundance of aquatic macroinvertebrate snail predators was negatively associated with per-capita cercarial release by snails, probably because of several potential sublethal effects on snails or snail infection, despite a positive association between snail predators and total snail numbers at a site, possibly due to shared habitat usage or prey tracking by the predators. Thus, complex bottom-up and top-down ecological effects in this region plausibly influence the snail shedding rate and thus, total local density of schistosome cercariae. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our study suggests that aquatic macrophytes and snail predators can influence per-capita cercarial production and total abundance of snails. Thus, snail control efforts might benefit by targeting specific snail habitats where parasite production is greatest. In conclusion, a better understanding of top-down and bottom-up ecological factors that regulate densities of cercarial release by snails, rather than solely snail densities or snail infection prevalence, might facilitate improved schistosomiasis control.


Asunto(s)
Plantas , Schistosoma/fisiología , Esquistosomiasis/epidemiología , Caracoles/parasitología , Animales , Cercarias/fisiología , Ecosistema , Humanos , Perifiton , Esquistosomiasis/transmisión , Senegal
4.
Nat Commun ; 9(1): 837, 2018 02 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29483531

RESUMEN

Schistosomiasis is a snail-borne parasitic disease that ranks among the most important water-based diseases of humans in developing countries. Increased prevalence and spread of human schistosomiasis to non-endemic areas has been consistently linked with water resource management related to agricultural expansion. However, the role of agrochemical pollution in human schistosome transmission remains unexplored, despite strong evidence of agrochemicals increasing snail-borne diseases of wildlife and a projected 2- to 5-fold increase in global agrochemical use by 2050. Using a field mesocosm experiment, we show that environmentally relevant concentrations of fertilizer, a herbicide, and an insecticide, individually and as mixtures, increase densities of schistosome-infected snails by increasing the algae snails eat and decreasing densities of snail predators. Epidemiological models indicate that these agrochemical effects can increase transmission of schistosomes. Identifying agricultural practices or agrochemicals that minimize disease risk will be critical to meeting growing food demands while improving human wellbeing.


Asunto(s)
Agroquímicos/farmacología , Astacoidea/efectos de los fármacos , Heterópteros/efectos de los fármacos , Schistosoma haematobium/efectos de los fármacos , Schistosoma mansoni/efectos de los fármacos , Esquistosomiasis/veterinaria , Caracoles/efectos de los fármacos , Animales , Astacoidea/fisiología , Atrazina/farmacología , Cloropirifos/farmacología , Cricetinae , Ecosistema , Fertilizantes/toxicidad , Cadena Alimentaria , Heterópteros/fisiología , Humanos , Recuento de Huevos de Parásitos , Perifiton/efectos de los fármacos , Perifiton/fisiología , Fitoplancton/efectos de los fármacos , Fitoplancton/crecimiento & desarrollo , Estanques , Riesgo , Schistosoma haematobium/crecimiento & desarrollo , Schistosoma mansoni/crecimiento & desarrollo , Esquistosomiasis/parasitología , Esquistosomiasis/transmisión , Caracoles/parasitología
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