Litcius/Paper detail

Onchocerciasis: Current knowledge and future goals

Luisa Frallonardo, Francesco Di Gennaro, Gianfranco Giorgio Panico, Roberta Novara, Elisabetta Pallara, Sergio Cotugno, Giacomo Guido, Elda De Vita, Aurelia Ricciardi, Valentina Totaro, Michele Camporeale, Giuseppina De Iaco, Davide Fiore Bavaro, Rossana Lattanzio, Giulia Patti, Gaetano Brindicci, Roberta Papagni, Carmen Pellegrino, Carmen Rita Santoro, Francesco Vladimiro Segala, Giovanni Putoto, Emanuele Nicastri, Annalisa Saracino

2022Frontiers in Tropical Diseases37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Human Onchocerciasis, caused by infection by the filarial nematode Onchocerca volvulus , is a neglected public health disease that affects millions of people in the endemic regions of sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America. It is also called river blindness because the Blackflies that transmit infection breeds in rapidly flowing fresh water streams and rivers. This review features state-of-the-art data on the parasite, its endobacteria Wolbachia , the prevalence of the infection and its geographical distribution, its diagnostics, the interaction between the parasite and its host, and the pathology of Onchocerciasis. By development and optimization of the control measures, transmission by the vector has been interrupted in foci of countries in the Americas (Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico, and Guatemala)and inSudan, followed by Onchocerciasis eliminations. The current state and future perspectives for vector control and elimination strategy are described.

Topics & Concepts

OnchocerciasisOnchocerca volvulusWolbachiaVector (molecular biology)BlindnessTransmission (telecommunications)Latin AmericansGeographySimuliumDistribution (mathematics)HelminthiasisPublic healthOnchocercaDiseaseImmunologyEnvironmental healthBiologyHost (biology)MedicineEcologyOptometryPathologyPolitical scienceMathematical analysisEngineeringLawElectrical engineeringLarvaRecombinant DNABiochemistryGeneMathematicsParasitic Diseases Research and TreatmentParasite Biology and Host InteractionsInsects and Parasite Interactions