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1.
Infect Genet Evol ; 62: 233-243, 2018 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29698771

RESUMO

Fascioliasis is a highly pathogenic zoonotic disease caused by the liver trematodes Fasciola hepatica and F. gigantica. Within the multidisciplinary initiative against this disease, there is the aim of understanding how this disease reached a worldwide distribution, with important veterinary and medical repercussions, by elucidating the spreading steps followed by the two fasciolids from their paleobiogeograhical origins. Fasciola eggs were detected in paleofaeces of a donkey, probably the present-day endangered Persian onager Equus hemionus onager, found in the Chehrabad salt mine archaeological site, Zanjan province, northwestern Iran. The biological remains dated back to the Sassanid period, 224-651 AD. Egg characteristics allowed for their specific ascription to F. hepatica. The interest of this finding relies on the fact of being the first archaeological finding of Fasciola in Asia and the Near East. Moreover, it allows to reach many conclusions about historical, epidemiological and spreading aspects of the disease. The finding in Chehrabad indicates that, at that time, this fasciolid had already spread through the Zagros mountains eastward from the Fertile Crescent. In that region and in ancient Egypt, livestock domestication played a crucial role in facilitating the disease spread during the postdomestication period. Donkeys appear at present to be usually infected by fasciolids in countries of the Fertile Crescent - Ancient Egypt region or neighbouring that region, with prevalences from low to very high. The high pathogenicity and mortality induced by Fasciola in these equines should be considered as an additional potential factor among the causes of the extinctions of E. h. hemippus in Syria, E. h. hydruntinus in the Anatolia-Balkans area, E. h. onager in the Caucasus and maybe also its decline in Iran. Indeed, Eurasiatic wild asses were present in the region and neighbourhood of the Fertile Crescent when the domestication of the livestock reservoirs of Fasciola began.


Assuntos
Equidae/parasitologia , Fasciola hepatica/isolamento & purificação , Fasciolíase/veterinária , Animais , Fasciolíase/epidemiologia , Fasciolíase/história , Fasciolíase/parasitologia , História Antiga , História Medieval , Irã (Geográfico)/epidemiologia
3.
J Parasitol ; 101(1): 57-63, 2015 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25357228

RESUMO

Ancient parasite eggs were recovered from environmental samples collected at a Viking-age settlement in Viborg, Denmark, dated 1018-1030 A.D. Morphological examination identified Ascaris sp., Trichuris sp., and Fasciola sp. eggs, but size and shape did not allow species identification. By carefully selecting genetic markers, PCR amplification and sequencing of ancient DNA (aDNA) isolates resulted in identification of: the human whipworm, Trichuris trichiura , using SSUrRNA sequence homology; Ascaris sp. with 100% homology to cox1 haplotype 07; and Fasciola hepatica using ITS1 sequence homology. The identification of T. trichiura eggs indicates that human fecal material is present and, hence, that the Ascaris sp. haplotype 07 was most likely a human variant in Viking-age Denmark. The location of the F. hepatica finding suggests that sheep or cattle are the most likely hosts. Further, we sequenced the Ascaris sp. 18S rRNA gene in recent isolates from humans and pigs of global distribution and show that this is not a suited marker for species-specific identification. Finally, we discuss ancient parasitism in Denmark and the implementation of aDNA analysis methods in paleoparasitological studies. We argue that when employing species-specific identification, soil samples offer excellent opportunities for studies of human parasite infections and of human and animal interactions of the past.


Assuntos
Ascaríase/história , Doenças dos Bovinos/história , Fasciolíase/história , Doenças dos Ovinos/história , Tricuríase/história , Animais , Ascaris/classificação , Ascaris/genética , Ascaris/isolamento & purificação , Bovinos , Doenças dos Bovinos/parasitologia , Impressões Digitais de DNA , Dinamarca , Fasciola hepatica/classificação , Fasciola hepatica/genética , Fasciola hepatica/isolamento & purificação , História Medieval , Humanos , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Óvulo/classificação , Paleopatologia , Ovinos , Doenças dos Ovinos/parasitologia , Trichuris/classificação , Trichuris/genética , Trichuris/isolamento & purificação
4.
Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz ; 98 Suppl 1: 141-3, 2003.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12687774

RESUMO

During an excavation of a site of the corded ware culture in the Saale-Unstrut-Valley (ca. 3000 BC) in Germany, a soil sample from the pelvis of a human skeleton was studied under palaeoparasitological aspects. Eggs of the trematode Fasciola hepatica and of the nematode genus Capillaria were found. This is the first case of a direct association of a F. hepatica-infestation to both a prehistoric human skeleton and domesticated animal remains. Sheep and cattle bones were present at the same site and F. hepatica eggs were found in bovine samples. This strongly points toward an existing infection cycle, involving humans as a final host.


Assuntos
Capillaria/isolamento & purificação , Fasciola hepatica/isolamento & purificação , Fasciolíase/história , Paleopatologia , Animais , Bovinos , Doenças dos Bovinos/história , Doenças dos Bovinos/parasitologia , Fasciolíase/veterinária , Alemanha , História Antiga , Humanos , Contagem de Ovos de Parasitas
5.
Trop Anim Health Prod ; 28(1): 23-39, 1996 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8815611

RESUMO

The research work relating to helminths, which has been conducted within the Helminthology Section of the CTVM, often in collaboration with colleagues from the tropics is reviewed and placed into a historical perspective. The research has, in the main, concentrated on the trematodes Fasciola hepatica and Fasciola gigantica and the cestodes Taenia saginata and Taenia solium, but work on other parasites including gastro-intestinal nematodes is also considered. All of these parasites are of obvious veterinary/economic importance particularly in the tropics and subtropics. While the zoonotic importance of T. saginata and T. solium has been recognised for many years, it is only more recently that the zoonotic impact of Fasciola spp. has been generally acknowledged.


Assuntos
Helmintíase Animal , Helmintíase/história , Animais , Fasciolíase/etiologia , Fasciolíase/história , Fasciolíase/veterinária , História do Século XX , Infecções por Nematoides/etiologia , Infecções por Nematoides/história , Infecções por Nematoides/veterinária , Pesquisa/história , Escócia , Teníase/etiologia , Teníase/história , Teníase/veterinária , Medicina Tropical/história , Medicina Veterinária/história , Zoonoses/história
8.
Nord Vet Med ; 32(1): 38-45, 1980 Jan.
Artigo em Dinamarquês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6987614

RESUMO

A monograph written by the physician Johan Valentin Wille in 1675 is discussed and commented. The monograph was published in Th. Bartholin Acta medica, the first medical journal in Denmark, and was in 1934 translated from Latin into Danish by the physician Eiler Høeg. It givees a detailed description of organ changes and internal parasites found in cattle and hare autopsied on Sealand 1674-75. Vermiform bodies found in the liver of cattle are undoubtedly identical with Fasciola hepatica. The tumorous or cystic formations in the bovine lung and liver correspond certainly with the larval stages of Echinococcus granulosus and the small cysts arranged as "bunches of grapes" on the liver surface and mesentery of hares cannot be anything else than Cysticercus pisiformis. It is possibly the first description of the mentioned parasites in animals in Denmark. The observations are published almost two centuries before the life-cycles of these parasites were finally clarified and about one century before the Danish Veterinary School was established at Christianshavn (in Copenhagen) and the founder Abildgaard started to publish his interesting observations on intestinal parasites.--The monograph is typical for that particular time, reflecting the decline of the medieval humoralism and the growth of the Renaissance science.


Assuntos
Doenças dos Animais/história , Animais , Bovinos/parasitologia , Doenças dos Bovinos/história , Cisticercose/história , Cisticercose/veterinária , Dinamarca , Equinococose/história , Equinococose/veterinária , Fasciolíase/história , Fasciolíase/veterinária , História do Século XVII , Lagomorpha/parasitologia
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