Human infections of fish-borne trematodes in Vietnam: Prevalence and molecular specific identification at an endemic commune in Nam Dinh province

[Display omitted] ► We examined prevalence and molecular identification of fish-borne trematodes in humans. ► There is correlation between eating raw fish and trematode infection. ► We found Clonorchis sinensis, Haplorchis pumilio, H. taichui and Centrocestus formosanus. ► Increasing age will increa...

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Published inExperimental parasitology Vol. 129; no. 4; pp. 355 - 361
Main Authors De, Nguyen Van, Le, Thanh Hoa
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Amsterdam Elsevier Inc 01.12.2011
Elsevier
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Summary:[Display omitted] ► We examined prevalence and molecular identification of fish-borne trematodes in humans. ► There is correlation between eating raw fish and trematode infection. ► We found Clonorchis sinensis, Haplorchis pumilio, H. taichui and Centrocestus formosanus. ► Increasing age will increase infection intensity. ► Molecular and phylogenetic analysis confirmed taxonomic identification of the found trematodes. The prevalence of fish-borne trematodes in humans and their molecular identification was investigated in the Rang Dong commune of Nam Dinh province, Vietnam, between January 2009 and December 2010. A total of 405 people in this commune were interviewed on the habit of eating raw fish and all of their stool samples were collected using the Kato-Katz technique for examination of the presence of fish-borne trematodes. The worms (and eggs) were first morphologically examined, counted, described and identified, then the representative isolates were subjected for molecular species confirmation. A total of 385 adult flukes collected from 10 patients were morphologically identified to species and defined as Clonorchis sinensis (14.58%) in Opisthorchiidae family, Haplorchis taichui (32.29%), Haplorchis pumilio (52.08%) and Centrocestus formosanus (1.04%) in Heterophyidae family. A high rate (77.8%) of the interviewees was found to have the habit of eating raw fish. This habit was attributed to the high infection rate of fish-borne trematode in humans (22.72%; OR=2.486). The infection rate of fish-borne trematodes in males was higher (29.3%) than that in females (16.0%) and increased by age, reaching the highest in the patients aged 40–59years (28.2–28.7%). The infection intensity of fish-borne trematode was found light (336 EPG). Adult flukes were collected from a group of the patients with the highest intensity of infection and subjected to molecular and phylogenetic analysis using a portion (326bp) of mitochondrial cox1. Phylogenetic tree inferred from cox1 sequences using sequence data for 34 isolates of opisthorchid, heterophyid, fasciolid, paragonimid, schistosomid trematodes and taeniid cestodes revealed that they are distinct groups. The newly collected with the known clonorchid and heterophyid isolates form the well defined taxonomic groups, respectively, confirming that C. sinensis and Haplorchis spp. (H. pumilio and H. taichui) were among the collected samples.
Bibliography:http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.exppara.2011.09.005
ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
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content type line 23
ISSN:0014-4894
1090-2449
DOI:10.1016/j.exppara.2011.09.005