2 research outputs found
Human strongyloidiasis: identifying knowledge gaps, with emphasis on environmental control
Michael J Taylor, Tara A Garrard, Francis J O'Donahoo, Kirstin E Ross Health and Environment, School of the Environment, Flinders University, Adelaide, SA, Australia Abstract: Strongyloides is a human parasitic nematode that is poorly understood outside a clinical context. This article identifies gaps within the literature, with particular emphasis on gaps that are hindering environmental control of Strongyloides. The prevalence and distribution of Strongyloides is unclear. An estimate of 100–370 million people infected worldwide has been proposed; however, inaccuracy of diagnosis, unreliability of prevalence mapping, and the fact that strongyloidiasis remains a neglected disease suggest that the higher figure of more than 300 million cases is likely to be a more accurate estimate. The complexity of Strongyloides life cycle means that laboratory cultures cannot be maintained outside of a host. This currently limits the range of laboratory-based research, which is vital to controlling Strongyloides through environmental alteration or treatment. Successful clinical treatment with antihelminthic drugs has meant that controlling Strongyloides through environmental control, rather than clinical intervention, has been largely overlooked. These control measures may encompass alteration of the soil environment through physical means, such as desiccation or removal of nutrients, or through chemical or biological agents. Repeated antihelminthic treatment of individuals with recurrent strongyloidiasis has not been observed to result in the selection of resistant strains; however, this has not been explicitly demonstrated, and relying on such assumptions in the long-term may prove to be shortsighted. It is ultimately naive to assume that continued administration of antihelminthics will be without any negative long-term effects. In Australia, strongyloidiasis primarily affects Indigenous communities, including communities from arid central Australia. This suggests that the range of Strongyloides extends beyond the reported tropical/subtropical boundary. Localized conditions that might result in this extended boundary include accumulation of moisture within housing because of malfunctioning health hardware inside and outside the house and the presence of dog fecal matter inside or outside housing areas. Keywords: Strongyloides stercoralis, strongyloidiasis, environmental control, parasitology, nematod
The National Strongyloides Working Group in Australia 10 workshops on: Commendations and recommendations
Strongyloidiasis, caused by the intestinal
helminth Strongyloides stercoralis,
is commonly found in developing
nations in tropical and subtropical regions.1
Strongyloidiasis was omitted by the World
Health Organization (WHO) as one of the Soil
Transmitted Helminths in their Neglected
Tropical Diseases Roadmap and can therefore
be considered one of the most neglected
tropical diseases.2,3 Despite its reputation
as a disease of developing countries,
strongyloidiasis remains an important disease
in Australia, particularly for Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islanders, and those living in
remote communities