Detection of Dirofilaria repens and Dirofilaria immitis DNA in mosquitoes from Belarus
Close
Conţinutul numărului revistei
Articolul precedent
Articolul urmator
226 0
SM ISO690:2012
ŞULEŞCO, Tatiana, VOLKOVA, Tatiana, YASHKOVA, Svetlana, TOMAZATOS, Alexandru, VON THIEN, Heidrun, LUHKEN, Renke, TANNICH, Egbert. Detection of Dirofilaria repens and Dirofilaria immitis DNA in mosquitoes from Belarus. In: Parasitology Research, 2016, nr. 9(115), pp. 3535-3541. ISSN 0932-0113. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00436-016-5118-y
EXPORT metadate:
Google Scholar
Crossref
CERIF

DataCite
Dublin Core
Parasitology Research
Numărul 9(115) / 2016 / ISSN 0932-0113 /ISSNe 1432-1955

Detection of Dirofilaria repens and Dirofilaria immitis DNA in mosquitoes from Belarus

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1007/s00436-016-5118-y

Pag. 3535-3541

Şuleşco Tatiana1, Volkova Tatiana2, Yashkova Svetlana3, Tomazatos Alexandru4, Von Thien Heidrun4, Luhken Renke4, Tannich Egbert4
 
1 Institute of Zoology ASM,
2 Scientific practical centre NAS of Belarus for biological resources,
3 Ministry of Health of Belarus,
4 Bernhard Nocht Institut fur Tropenmedizin Hamburg, Haemorrhagic Fever Reference and Research, Hamburg
 
 
Disponibil în IBN: 22 ianuarie 2023


Rezumat

During the last two decades, Belarus faces an increase of human cases of Dirofilaria (Nematoda, Spirurida, Onchocercidae) infections. However, comprehensive analyses explaining this development and the identification of mosquito vector species are missing. Here, we present results using temperature data from Belarus and show that the annual number of human Dirofilaria cases is significantly correlated with the yearly average temperatures (Spearman’s rho = 0.49, p < 0.05) and the average sum of potential Dirofilaria transmission days (Spearman’s rho = 0.46, p < 0.05), suggesting that autochthonous transmission is at least in part responsible for the increasing number of clinical Dirofilaria cases in the country. In addition, 467 female mosquitoes were collected from different sampling sites in the regions of Brest and Minsk, which were analyzed by molecular methods for the presence of Dirofilaria repens and Dirofilaria immitis DNA, respectively. Two pools (5.56 %) were tested positive for Dirofilaria (estimated infection rate per 100 specimens = 0.44, 95 % confidence interval = 0.08–1.43), comprising one Anopheles claviger s.l. pool that was positive for D. repens and one Culex pipiens s.l./Culex torrentium pool positive for D. immitis DNA. This, to our knowledge, is the first molecular evidence for the presence of Dirofilaria in mosquitoes from Belarus, suggesting a high probability of autochthonous Dirofilaria transmission in the country. 

Cuvinte-cheie
Belarus, Dirofilaria immitis, Dirofilaria repens, Mosquito, surveillance