Wild animals may contribute to the resurgence of African sleeping sickness
Wild animals may be a key contributor to the continuing spread
of African sleeping sickness, new research published in PLOS Computational Biology shows. The West African form of the
disease, also known as Gambiense Human African trypanosomiasis, affects around
10,000 people in Africa every year and is deadly if left untreated. The disease
is caused by a brain-invading parasite transmitted by bites of the tsetse fly, and
gets its name from the hallmark symptoms of drowsiness and altered sleeping
patterns that affect late-stage patients, along with other physical and
neurological manifestations including manic episodes and hallucinations that
eventually lead to coma and death.
Despite
numerous previous studies showing that animals can be infected with the
parasite, the prevailing view has been that the disease persisted in its
traditional areas almost only because of human-to-human transmission. A new
study, from an international team of researchers led by the London School of
Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, challenges this assumption by using a
mathematical model to show that the disease not only can persist in an area
even when there are no human cases, but probably requires the presence of
infected wild animals to maintain the chain of transmission. The authors' model
was based on data collected in active screening campaigns between November 1998
and February 1999 in the Bipindi area of Cameroon. One of the species in the data
group was the White-eyelid mangabey, pictured below.
The
research provides an attractive explanation for why sleeping sickness survives
in places which have undergone intensive efforts to find and treat infected
people in the community. It suggests that efforts to eliminate the disease must
factor in the wild animal populations.
"This
research suggests that targeting human populations alone, the main current
control strategy, might not be enough to control the disease," says
Sebastian Funk, the lead author of the study. "Maintenance of transmission
in wild animal populations could explain the reappearance of sleeping sickness
in humans after years without cases."
Source: Public
Library of Science
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