African trypanosomiasis with special reference to Egyptian Trypanosoma evansi: is it a neglected zoonosis?

J Egypt Soc Parasitol. 2014 Dec;44(3):741-8. doi: 10.12816/0007877.

Abstract

Trypanosomes (including humans) are blood and sometimes tissue parasites of the order Kinetoplastida, family Trypanosomatidae, genus Trypanosoma, principally transmitted by biting insects where most of them undergo a biological cycle. They are divided into Stercoraria with the posterior station inoculation, including T. cruzi, both an extra- and intracellular parasite that causes Chagas disease, a major human disease affecting 15 million people and threatening 100 million people in Latin America, and the Salivaria with the anterior station inoculation, mainly African livestock pathogenic trypanosomes, including the agents of sleeping sickness, a major human disease affecting around half a million people and threatening 60 million people in Africa. Now, T. evansi was reported in man is it required to investigate its zoonotic potential?

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Egypt / epidemiology
  • Humans
  • Neglected Diseases*
  • Trypanosoma / classification*
  • Trypanosoma / genetics
  • Trypanosomiasis, African / epidemiology
  • Trypanosomiasis, African / parasitology*
  • Zoonoses*