AI Article Synopsis

  • Fascioliasis is a disease spread by freshwater snails, particularly prevalent in the Northern Bolivian Altiplano due to high human infection rates and livestock involvement.
  • Yearly treatment campaigns are not enough to stop the cycle of infection, highlighting the need for a One Health approach that considers both human and animal health.
  • Research conducted on local snail populations revealed differences in breeding cycles and environmental influences, providing valuable data for future fascioliasis control efforts in high-altitude regions and potentially other countries.

Article Abstract

Fascioliasis is a freshwater snail-borne zoonotic disease. The Northern Bolivian Altiplano is a very high altitude endemic area where the highest human prevalences and intensities have been reported. Preventive chemotherapy by treatment campaigns is yearly applied. However, liver fluke infection of cattle, sheep, pigs and donkeys assures endemicity and consequent human infection and re-infection risks. A One Health action has therefore been implemented. Activity concerns lymnaeid vectors and environment diversity. Studies included growth, egg-laying and life span in laboratory-reared lymnaeids. Different habitat types and influencing factors were assessed. All populations proved to belong to Galba truncatula by rDNA sequencing. Analyses comprised physico-chemical characteristics and monthly follow-up of water temperature, pH and quantity, and lymnaeid abundance and density. Population dynamics in the transmission foci differed. Mean environmental temperature was lower than fluke development minimum temperature threshold, but water temperature was higher, except during winter. A two generations/year pattern appeared in permanent water habitats, and one generation/year pattern in habitats drying out for months. The multidisciplinary control measures can be extended from one part of the endemic area to another. These studies, made for the first time at very high altitude, constitute a baseline useful for fascioliasis control in other countries.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S1984-29612021014DOI Listing

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