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Leishmaniasis: Recent epidemiological studies in the Middle East

Chinyere A. Knight, David R. Harris, Shifaa O. Alshammari, Ayele Gugssa, Todd Young, Clarence M. Lee

2023Frontiers in Microbiology87 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Leishmaniasis, one of the most neglected tropical diseases (NTDs), is the third most important vector-borne disease worldwide. This disease has a global impact and severity of the infection and is greatest in the Middle East. The agent of infection is a protozoan parasite of the genus, Leishmania , and is generally transmitted by blood-sucking female sandflies. In humans, there are three clinical forms of infection: (1) cutaneous (CL), (2) mucocutaneous (ML), and (3) visceral leishmaniasis (VL). This review aims to discuss the current epidemiological status of leishmaniasis in Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Syria, and Yemen with a consideration of treatment options. The elevated risk of leishmaniasis is influenced by the transmission of the disease across endemic countries into neighboring non-infected regions.

Topics & Concepts

LeishmaniasisEpidemiologyTransmission (telecommunications)Visceral leishmaniasisLeishmaniaDiseaseMucocutaneous zoneCutaneous leishmaniasisVector (molecular biology)Tropical diseaseMiddle EastImmunologyMedicineEnvironmental healthBiologyParasite hostingGeographyPathologyComputer scienceGeneBiochemistryRecombinant DNAWorld Wide WebArchaeologyElectrical engineeringEngineeringResearch on Leishmaniasis StudiesTrypanosoma species research and implications