6533b7dafe1ef96bd126ec71
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Evidence of autochthonous transmission of urinary schistosomiasis in Almeria (southeast Spain): An outbreak analysis.
Sergio Merino-salasSantiago Mas-comaJoaquín Salas-coronasJosé Ignacio Abad Vivas-pérezAna Belén Lozano-serranoMaría Dolores BarguesPatricio ArtigasAlberto Martínez-ortísubject
Schistosoma haematobiumVeterinary medicinebiologyBulinusBulinus truncatusPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthOutbreakSchistosomiasisbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseSerologyDisease OutbreaksSchistosomiasis haematobiaInfectious DiseasesMalalties parasitàriesSpainVector (epidemiology)medicineSchistosoma haematobiumMalalties transmissiblesAnimalsHumansBulinusSchistosomadescription
Abstract Background Schistosomiasis is endemic in 78 countries belonging to tropical and subtropical areas. However, autochthonous transmission of urogenital schistosomiasis was reported in Corsica (France) in 2013. We present evidence of autochthonous transmission of urogenital schistosomiasis in Almeria (Spain) in 2003. Methods Description of the outbreak in farmers and subsequent epidemiological studies aimed at searching for Bulinus snails and their genotypic characteristics. Results The outbreak affected 4 farmers out of a group of 5 people who repeatedly bathed that summer in an irrigation pool in the area. Two of them presented macroscopic hematuria with bilharziomas, showing the presence of Schistosoma eggs in bladder biopsies. Two others were asymptomatic but the serology for schistosomiasis was positive. In 2015, the presence of the vector Bulinus truncatus was demonstrated in Almeria in water collections of appropriate characteristics. DNA sequencing proving that local B. truncatus species were base-to-base identical to B. truncatus from Senegal. Conclusions We present a new outbreak of autochthonous transmission of urogenital schistosomiasis in Europe. Although no new cases of autochthonous transmission have been reported, some other cases may have occurred at that time or later on and be unnoticed as many cases of schistosomiasis are asymptomatic or present mild and unspecific symptoms.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2021-01-01 | Travel medicine and infectious disease |