6 research outputs found

    Molecular detection of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (MERS-CoV) in Tunisian dromedary camels (Camelus dromedarius)

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    Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (MERS-CoV) was identified in humans in 2012. Dromedary camels were considered as the major reservoir of the virus throw several studies. Tunisian dromedary camels were implicated in a serological survey and a seropositivity reaching 100% was observed among some of them. Therefore, more investigations are necessary to look for the current infection situation. In this study, we aimed to detect the MERS-CoV virus in our camels by molecular technics. Blood and nasal swabs samples from 64 dromedary camels from 4 Tunisian provinces were collected during June 2014 and April 2015. All the animals tested negative by real time reverse transcriptase–polymerase chain reaction assay (RT-PCR). These findings could not confirm the absence of MERS-CoV active shading among the Tunisian camel population and more researches should be carried on to survey dromedary camels in Tunisia and its neighboring countries

    Détection moléculaire du Coronavirus du Syndrome Respiratoire du Moyen-Orient (MERS-CoV) chez les dromadaires tunisiens (Camelus dromedarius)

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    Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (MERS-CoV) was identified in humans in 2012. Dromedary camels were considered as the major reservoir of the virus throw several studies. Tunisian dromedary camels were implicated in a serological survey and a seropositivity reaching 100% was observed among some of them. Therefore, more investigations are necessary to look for the current infection situation. In this study, we aimed to detect the MERS-CoV virus in our camels by molecular technics. Blood and nasal swabs samples from 64 dromedary camels from 4 Tunisian provinces were collected during June 2014 and April 2015. All the animals tested negative by real time reverse transcriptase–polymerase chain reaction assay (RT-PCR). These findings could not confirm the absence of MERS-CoV active shading among the Tunisian camel population and more researches should be carried on to survey dromedary camels in Tunisia and its neighboring countries. Keywords: Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS), Camels, Tunisia, RT-PCR, animal surveillance, Coronavirus (CoVs), molecular detection.Le Coronavirus du syndrome respiratoire du Moyen-Orient (MERS-CoV) a été identifié chez l’Homme pour la première fois en 2012. A travers plusieurs études, les dromadaires ont été alors considérés comme étant le réservoir majeur du virus. Une enquête sérologique chez les dromadaires en Tunisie a permis de démontrer une séropositivité allant jusqu’à 100% chez certains sujets étudiés. Ainsi, des recherches supplémentaires semblent être nécessaires pour évaluer l’état d’infection actuel du pays. A travers cette étude, nous visons, par le biais de techniques moléculaires, la détection du virus (MERS-CoV) chez nos dromadaires tunisiens. Durant la période s’étalant entre juin 2014 et avril 2015, des échantillons de sang et des écouvillonnages nasaux ont été prélevés à partir de 64 individus prévenant de 4 gouvernorats. L’essai de la détection moléculaire, en utilisant la technique d’amplification génomique en chaîne de polymérase avec transcriptase inverse (RT-PCR), a démontré que tous les sujets étudiés ont donné un réponse négative. Cependant, ces résultats ne peuvent pas confirmer l’absence d’une excrétion active du virus chez la population cameline tunisienne, raison pour laquelle d’autres investigations doivent être enchaînées pour surveiller l’état d’infection cameline par le MERS-CoV non seulement en Tunisie mais également dans les pays voisins. Mots-clés: Le Syndrome Respiratoire du Moyen-Orient (SRMO), dromadaires, Tunisie, RT-PCR, surveillance animale, Coronavirus (CoVs), détection moléculair

    Lutte contre la rage en Afrique: du constat à l’action

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    International audienceAs a follow-up to the first AfroREB (Africa Rabies Expert Bureau) meeting, held in Grand-Bassam (Côte-d'Ivoire) in March 2008, African rabies experts of the Afro-REB network met a second time to complete the evaluation of the rabies situation in Africa and define specific action plans. About forty French speaking rabies specialists from Northern, Western and Central Africa and Madagascar met in Dakar (Senegal), from March 16th to 19th, 2009. With the participation of delegates from Tunisia, who joined the AfroREB network this year, 15 French speaking African countries were represented. Experts from the Institut Pasteur in Paris, the Alliance for Rabies Control, and the Southern and Eastern African Rabies Group (SEARG, a network of rabies experts from 19 English speaking Southern and Eastern African countries) were in attendance, to participate in the discussion and share their experiences. AfroREB members documented 146 known human rabies cases in all represented countries combined for 2008, for a total population of 209.3 million, or an incidence of 0.07 cases per 100,000 people. Even admitting that the experts do not have access to all reported cases, this is far from the WHO estimation of 2 rabies deaths per 100,000 people in urban areas and 3.6 per 100,000 in rural Africa. It was unanimously agreed that the priority is to break the vicious cycle of indifference and lack of information which is the main barrier to human rabies prevention.Le Bureau des experts de la rage du continent africain (AfroREB) s’est réuni pour la seconde fois, en mars 2009, pour poursuivre leur évaluation de la situation de la rage en Afrique et définir des plans d’action. Une quarantaine d’éminents spécialistes de la rage venant de 15 pays d’Afrique francophone se sont retrouvés à Dakar avec des représentants de l’Institut Pasteur de Paris, du réseau anglophone SEARG (groupe de spécialistes de la rage d’Afrique australe et orientale) et de l’Alliance mondiale contre la rage. En Afrique, de nombreux cas de rage ne sont ni identifiés ni rapportés. Alors que l’OMS estime à 25 000 le nombre de décès annuels dus à la rage sur ce continent (2 à 3,6 décès pour 100 000 habitants), les membres d’AfroREB ont comptabilisé, en tout et pour tout, en 2008, 146 cas pour leurs 15 pays, soit 0,07 cas pour 100 000 habitants. La priorité est de briser le cercle vicieux de l’indifférence et du manque d’information, afin de pouvoir lutter contre la rage humaine

    The Middle East and Eastern Europe rabies Expert Bureau (MEEREB) third meeting: Lyon-France (7–8 April, 2015)

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    MEEREB is an inter-regional network of countries from North Africa, Europe, the Middle East and Central Asia that work together with the aim of improving rabies control and prevention at local, regional and global level. MEEREB members met for the third time in 2015 in France (Lyon) to review the current rabies situation within the network and to discuss the way forward the prospect of a One Health approach against rabies. Dogs were the main vector of transmission in all MEEREB countries except for Croatia and Serbia where foxes represented the primary source. The number of rabies animal cases reported in 2014 varied substantially between countries with Ukraine reporting the highest number of animal cases. Human cases still occur in North Africa and all Middle East and Eurasian countries while no cases of human rabies were reported in Croatia, Serbia and Romania, although cases of rabies were identified in both dogs and foxes in 2014. Participants concluded that MEEREB can act as a think-tank where countries can share data, information, experiences and best practices to jointly address challenges in rabies control and prevention. They called for elimination of dog-transmitted rabies through vaccine and rabies immunoglobulin stockpiles and implementation of a One Health approach to achieve rabies’s eradication. Keywords: MEEREB, Rabies, Epidemiology, Repor
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