Diagnosis and epidemiology of Trichinella infections in wildlife in the Netherlands

Trichinella infections in foxes and wild boars were studied to determine the prevalence of infection in wildlife in the Netherlands. Muscles of 429 forelegs of foxes (Vulpes vulpes) and diaphragms of 11 wild boars (Sus scrofa) were artificially digested. Single larvae of Trichinella were identified...

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Main Authors: Van Der Giessen J.W.B., Rombout Y., Van Der Veen A., Pozio E.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2001-06-01
Series:Parasite
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/parasite/200108s2103
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spelling doaj-9c15386142724e58b0510a2d54a69e592021-02-02T00:06:59ZengEDP SciencesParasite1252-607X1776-10422001-06-018S103S10510.1051/parasite/200108s2103parasite200108s2p103Diagnosis and epidemiology of Trichinella infections in wildlife in the NetherlandsVan Der Giessen J.W.B.Rombout Y.Van Der Veen A.Pozio E.Trichinella infections in foxes and wild boars were studied to determine the prevalence of infection in wildlife in the Netherlands. Muscles of 429 forelegs of foxes (Vulpes vulpes) and diaphragms of 11 wild boars (Sus scrofa) were artificially digested. Single larvae of Trichinella were identified at species level using random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD-PCR). In addition, an ELISA using ES antigen was used to test serum samples of 458 wild boars. The prevalence of Trichinella In foxes ranged from 3.9 % in the the eastern part of the country, 13.1 % in the central part of the country and 1.3 % in the most western part of the country. Trichinella larvae of foxes were identified as T. britovi. In most samples, identification of larvae did not show reproducible results. The serological prevalence of Trichinella infections in wild boars was 6.8 %. Wild boar populations are located in the central and In the southern part of the country. Trichinella larvae of wild boar were identified as T. spiralis. These results show that two Trichinella species are involved in the epidemiology of trichinellosis among wildlife. On the basis of previous reports, the present results suggest that the prevalence of Trichinella infection in wildlife is increasing in the last 20 years.http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/parasite/200108s2103wildlifeT. britoviT. spiralisprevalencethe Netherlands
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Van Der Giessen J.W.B.
Rombout Y.
Van Der Veen A.
Pozio E.
spellingShingle Van Der Giessen J.W.B.
Rombout Y.
Van Der Veen A.
Pozio E.
Diagnosis and epidemiology of Trichinella infections in wildlife in the Netherlands
Parasite
wildlife
T. britovi
T. spiralis
prevalence
the Netherlands
author_facet Van Der Giessen J.W.B.
Rombout Y.
Van Der Veen A.
Pozio E.
author_sort Van Der Giessen J.W.B.
title Diagnosis and epidemiology of Trichinella infections in wildlife in the Netherlands
title_short Diagnosis and epidemiology of Trichinella infections in wildlife in the Netherlands
title_full Diagnosis and epidemiology of Trichinella infections in wildlife in the Netherlands
title_fullStr Diagnosis and epidemiology of Trichinella infections in wildlife in the Netherlands
title_full_unstemmed Diagnosis and epidemiology of Trichinella infections in wildlife in the Netherlands
title_sort diagnosis and epidemiology of trichinella infections in wildlife in the netherlands
publisher EDP Sciences
series Parasite
issn 1252-607X
1776-1042
publishDate 2001-06-01
description Trichinella infections in foxes and wild boars were studied to determine the prevalence of infection in wildlife in the Netherlands. Muscles of 429 forelegs of foxes (Vulpes vulpes) and diaphragms of 11 wild boars (Sus scrofa) were artificially digested. Single larvae of Trichinella were identified at species level using random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD-PCR). In addition, an ELISA using ES antigen was used to test serum samples of 458 wild boars. The prevalence of Trichinella In foxes ranged from 3.9 % in the the eastern part of the country, 13.1 % in the central part of the country and 1.3 % in the most western part of the country. Trichinella larvae of foxes were identified as T. britovi. In most samples, identification of larvae did not show reproducible results. The serological prevalence of Trichinella infections in wild boars was 6.8 %. Wild boar populations are located in the central and In the southern part of the country. Trichinella larvae of wild boar were identified as T. spiralis. These results show that two Trichinella species are involved in the epidemiology of trichinellosis among wildlife. On the basis of previous reports, the present results suggest that the prevalence of Trichinella infection in wildlife is increasing in the last 20 years.
topic wildlife
T. britovi
T. spiralis
prevalence
the Netherlands
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/parasite/200108s2103
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AT rombouty diagnosisandepidemiologyoftrichinellainfectionsinwildlifeinthenetherlands
AT vanderveena diagnosisandepidemiologyoftrichinellainfectionsinwildlifeinthenetherlands
AT pozioe diagnosisandepidemiologyoftrichinellainfectionsinwildlifeinthenetherlands
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