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Spatiotemporal Variation in Environmental Vibrio cholerae in an Estuary in Southern Coastal Ecuador. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Cholera outbreaks are influenced by local environmental conditions and ecosystems, with the 1991-2004 pandemic starting in Perú and affecting Ecuador's El Oro province, particularly its city Machala.
  • Researchers conducted a 10-month study in 2014, examining water quality factors like pH, temperature, and algal concentrations that affect cholera growth, finding persistence of certain cholera strains but not the harmful toxigenic ones.
  • The study concluded that environmental conditions in Machala present a significant risk for cholera re-emergence, especially in lower-income urban areas, emphasizing the importance of monitoring these ecosystems to predict future outbreaks.

Article Abstract

Cholera emergence is strongly linked to local environmental and ecological context. The 1991-2004 pandemic emerged in Perú and spread north into Ecuador's El Oro province, making this a key site for potential re-emergence. Machala, El Oro, is a port city of 250,000 inhabitants, near the Peruvian border. Many livelihoods depend on the estuarine system, from fishing for subsistence and trade, to domestic water use. In 2014, we conducted biweekly sampling for 10 months in five estuarine locations, across a gradient of human use, and ranging from inland to ocean. We measured water-specific environmental variables implicated in cholera growth and persistence: pH, temperature, salinity, and algal concentration, and evaluated samples in five months for pathogenic and non-pathogenic , by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). We found environmental persistence of pandemic strains O1 and O139, but no evidence for toxigenic strains. presence was coupled to algal and salinity concentration, and sites exhibited considerable seasonal and spatial heterogeneity. This study indicates that environmental conditions in Machala are optimal for cholera re-emergence, with risk peaking during September, and higher risk near urban periphery low-income communities. This highlights a need for surveillance of this coupled cholera-estuarine system to anticipate potential future cholera outbreaks.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5877031PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15030486DOI Listing

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