Skip Navigation

拉美与加勒比地区

新闻

  • 打印
  • 发表评论
  • | 共享

Dog fleas implicated in leishmaniasis spread

Daniela Hirschfeld

2009年11月17日 | EN | ES

Examining a dog with leishmaniasis

Picasa/jacdenice

Dog fleas, not just sandflies, may be transmitting the potentially fatal disease leishmaniasis, say scientists.

Leishmaniasis, a common but neglected disease in tropical and subtropical areas, is caused by a parasite transmitted by sandflies to humans.

The disease ranges from a mild form, in which skin lesions heal by themselves, to a fatal form that invades internal organs.

Dogs harbour some species of Leishmania parasite and represent the largest urban reservoir of the disease, write Brazilian scientists in a Veterinary Parasitology paper published last month (October).

"Canine visceral leishmaniasis — the form that affects dogs — is a problem worldwide because dogs are asymptomatic [lack symptoms] and have parasites on their skin that can infect humans," Valéria Marçal Felix de Lima of Brazil's Paulista State University and an author of the study, told SciDev.Net.

But leishmaniasis is increasing in parts of Brazil even though sandflies show low rates of infection with the parasite. This suggests other vectors must be transmitting the parasite between dogs.

So de Lima's team tested dog fleas. They mashed up fleas from 22 leishmaniasis-infected dogs, and injected them into 22 hamsters.

Four months later, a fifth of the hamsters were carrying Leishmania parasites.

"Dog fleas could be important in transmitting the disease from dog to dog," says de Lima. Sandflies can then transmit this reservoir of infection to humans, she explains.

De Lima concedes the research does not show that fleas can directly transmit leishmaniasis between dogs, but this should be investigated.

If dog fleas are proven to play a role in leishmaniasis transmission, "it will be necessary to change the control methods in dogs to include new strategies to control fleas", says de Lima.

Oscar Daniel Salomón, of Argentina's National Program of Leishmaniasis, says: "The article only shows that fleas who fed from infected dogs had parasites in their stomach, just like a dirty syringe could have them".

More studies are needed to prove if these findings make epidemiological sense," he adds.

Link to abstract in Veterinary Parasitology

添加你的评论

这是您的网络:张贴您的评论,和别人分享您关于我们的任何文章的观点。

您需要注册后发表评论或者给作者发送评论的邮件。请登陆或注册。 登陆 或者 注册.

所有的评论都要接受审核,我们保留对评中包括 不适当/不适合的语言进行编辑的权利。科学与发展网络享有网站发布所有内容的版权。请查看使用条款了解详情。

只要适当标明来源与作者就可以免费复制科学与发展网络所有内容。更多详情请参见 发表评论.

返回 新闻
到达顶部