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AMCoR:Asahikawa Medical University Collection and Research (旭川医科大学学術成果リポジトリ)は、本学で生産された電子的な知的生産物(学術雑誌論文の原稿・教材・学術資料など)を保存し、原則的に無償で発信するためのインターネット上の保管庫です。

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閲覧数:851
ID 23505582
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タイトル Drivers of Echinococcus multilocularis Transmission in China: Small Mammal Diversity, Landscape or Climate?
著者
Patrick, Giraudoux
Francis, Raoul
David, Pleydell
Tiaoying, Li
Xiuming, Han
Jiamin, Qiu
Yan, Xie
Hu, Wang
伊藤, 亮 (Ito, Akira)
Philip, S. Craig
上位タイトル
PLoS neglected tropical diseases Vol.7, No.3  (2013. 7) ,p.e2045-
識別番号
ISSN
1935-2735
DOI 10.1371/journal.pntd.0002045
その他
PMID:23505582
抄録 BACKGROUND:

Human alveolar echinococcocosis (AE) is a highly pathogenic zoonotic disease caused by the larval stage of the cestode E. multilocularis. Its life-cycle includes more than 40 species of small mammal intermediate hosts. Therefore, host biodiversity losses could be expected to alter transmission. Climate may also have possible impacts on E. multilocularis egg survival. We examined the distribution of human AE across two spatial scales, (i) for continental China and (ii) over the eastern edge of the Tibetan plateau. We tested the hypotheses that human disease distribution can be explained by either the biodiversity of small mammal intermediate host species, or by environmental factors such as climate or landscape characteristics.
METHODOLOGY/FINDINGS:

The distributions of 274 small mammal species were mapped to 967 point locations on a grid covering continental China. Land cover, elevation, monthly rainfall and temperature were mapped using remotely sensed imagery and compared to the distribution of human AE disease at continental scale and over the eastern Tibetan plateau. Infection status of 17,589 people screened by abdominal ultrasound in 2002-2008 in 94 villages of Tibetan areas of western Sichuan and Qinghai provinces was analyzed using generalized additive mixed models and related to epidemiological and environmental covariates. We found that human AE was not directly correlated with small mammal reservoir host species richness, but rather was spatially correlated with landscape features and climate which could confirm and predict human disease hotspots over a 200,000 km(2) region.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE:

E. multilocularis transmission and resultant human disease risk was better predicted from landscape features that could support increases of small mammal host species prone to population outbreaks, rather than host species richness. We anticipate that our study may be a starting point for further research wherein landscape management could be used to predict human disease risk and for controlling this zoonotic helminthic.
注記 This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License
言語
eng
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