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1.
Parasitol Int ; 100: 102867, 2024 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38364969

RESUMO

Despite the importance of fish-borne trematodes of the family Opisthorchiidae as causative agents of human liver fluke disease, studies on these parasites outside Asia are relativally scarce. In South America, human focus of amphimerosis is known in Ecuador since the mid-20th century, and Amphimerus spp. have also been reported in wild and domestic mammals. Nevertheless, the knowledge on the snails that act as the first intermediate host of these potentially zoonotic parasites are scarce. Herein, a new cercaria of the pleurolophocercous morphotype found in the freshwater snail Idiopyrgus souleyetianus from Brazil was subjected to morphological and molecular studies. Multigene phylogenetic analyses based on 28S, 5.8S-ITS-2 and Cox-1 sequences enabled the identification of Amphimerus sp., a species distinct from that reported in humans from Ecuador. This cercariae was morphologically compared with other opisthorchiid cercariae known. The possible occurrence of human amphimerosis in Brazil is discussed.


Assuntos
Fasciola hepatica , Opisthorchidae , Trematódeos , Infecções por Trematódeos , Animais , Humanos , Brasil , Filogenia , Caramujos/parasitologia , Cercárias/genética , Cercárias/anatomia & histologia , Infecções por Trematódeos/epidemiologia , Infecções por Trematódeos/veterinária , Infecções por Trematódeos/parasitologia , Mamíferos
2.
Acta Parasitol ; 66(1): 277-281, 2021 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32833223

RESUMO

PURPOSE: Despite recent advances in the study of amphimerosis, aspects related to the taxonomy of the opisthorchiid species involved in human infection in Ecuador are not completely known. In the present study, previous morphological descriptions of Amphimerus sp. found in human beings and animals from Ecuador were re-studied, aiming to the identification of the parasite. METHODS: The morphological traits and measures of isolates of Amphimerus from Ecuadorian foci of transmission previously reported by different authors were critically analyzed and used to achieve the specific identification of the parasite. Morphological and morphometric data, including measures of structures, ratio between suckers, and disposition of vitellaria, were used for taxonomic identification based on taxonomic keys, reviews, and descriptive works. RESULTS: The morphological study based on literature data reveals that Amphimerus lancea (Diesing, 1850) is a species potentially involved in human amphimerosis in Ecuador. The main characteristics here used for differential diagnoses of this species is the larger size of the ventral sucker, which results in an oral sucker/ventral sucker ratio in isolates here considered as A. lancea (1.8-2.7) higher than those verified in other seven species of the genus Amphimerus reported in South America (0.5-1.3). The relative space that the ventral sucker occupies in relation to body width (at the level of ventral sucker) is also greater in A. lancea (49-64% vs 15-38%). CONCLUSION: Amphimerus lancea is at least one of the species involved in human amphimerosis in Ecuador. The parasite distribution and animal reservoirs are updated and the possibility of new areas of occurrence of human diseases in South America is highlighted. Future integrative taxonomic studies using material properly fixed is encouraged, which can corroborate the morphological identification here achieved and result in progress in the complex taxonomy of Amphimerus spp.


Assuntos
Opisthorchidae , Animais , Equador/epidemiologia , Humanos , Fenótipo , América do Sul/epidemiologia
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