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General issues of Vaccine
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General issues of Tropical med.
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General issues of Travel med.
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Trematode (fluke, distoma)
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Pathogen and Taxonomy
- The genus Trichinella has genetically distinguished but taxonomically still undetermined genotypes other than usual species
- The biggest morphological classification is based on the presence/absence of collagen capsule surrounding the pathogen in cysts in infected muscles
※Manson's Tropical Infectious Diseases 24th ed. (published in 2023) describes that T. spiralis has several subspecies but according to NCBI Taxonomy Browser and the following articles subspecies written in Manson's are classified as species.
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Pozio, E., Rosa, G. la, Murrell, K. D., & Lichtenfels, J. R. (1992). Taxonomic Revision of the Genus Trichinella. The Journal of Parasitology, 78(4), 654. https://doi.org/10.2307/3283540
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Encapsulated
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Non-encapsulated
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Infect only mammals
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Infect birds and mammals
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- Trichinella spiralis
- Trichinella nativa
- Trichinella nelsoni
- Trichinella britovi
- Trichinella murrelli
- Trichinella patagoniensis
- Trichinella genotype T6
- Trichinella genotype T8
- Trichinella genotype T9
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- Trichinella pseudospiralis
- Trichinella papuae
- Trichinella zimbabwensis
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Epidemiology
- Since Trichinella infections often cause asymptomatic or mild disease and no serological tests with high performance is available, true epidemiology of human trichinellosis is thought still underestimated.
- Trichinellosis distributes worldwide from arctic region through the tropics.
- Human trichinellosis in developed countries has been dramatically decreased due to improvement of farming and slaughtering of domestic pigs and shrinkage of backyard pig farming in private facilities.
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Yayeh, M., Yadesa, G., Erara, M., Fantahun, S., Gebru, A., & Birhan, M. (2020). Epidemiology, diagnosis and public health importance of Trichinellosis. Journal of World’s Poultry Research, 10(3), 131–139. https://doi.org/10.36380/scil.2020.ojafr18
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Life cycle and Transmission
- Life cycle is maintained amongst host mammals and birds.
- Pigs and rats (domestic cycle) or wild bores, wild bears, polar bears, rats and birds (sylvatic cycle).
- Humans are accidental hosts for Trichinella
- Refer to DPDx - Trichinellosis - US CDC
- Transmission to human occurs by ingestion of raw or undercooked meat including pigs, wild bores, horse, dog, bear, polar bear, badger and soft-shelled turtle (スッポン).
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Rostami, A., Gamble, H. R., Dupouy-Camet, J., Khazan, H., & Bruschi, F. (2017). Meat sources of infection for outbreaks of human trichinellosis. Food Microbiology, 64, 65–71. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fm.2016.12.012
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- The world-first report of trichinellosis originated from soft-shelled turtle was published in Japan in 2009 (but only in Japanese and neglected from English literature).
Human disease
- Humans are accidental (deadend) hosts.
Diagnosis
Treatment