» Articles » PMID: 32186511

Fasciola Hepatica: the Dispersal of Cercariae Shed by the Snail Galba Truncatula

Overview
Journal Parasite
Specialty Parasitology
Date 2020 Mar 19
PMID 32186511
Citations 2
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Field investigations in 14 wild watercress beds located in the French region of Limousin, a known endemic area for distomatosis, were performed for three years to determine the distance that cercariae of Fasciola hepatica can reach in water before their encystment on the host plant. Each bed was located on the course of an open drainage furrow, while snails (Galba truncatula) lived upstream around the emergence of a source. Five plant species were collected in early April and examined to find metacercariae. Most cysts were noted on Nasturtium officinale (188 on 48.7 kg of dripped plants), followed by Helosciadium nodiflorum (125 on 33.4 kg). On the other plant species, there were few larvae. Most cercariae encysted on the plants growing in the most upstream part of each bed, usually on the first 50 cm in length. When water in the beds was fast running, the distribution of metacercariae was more limited and their number was fewer than those in the beds fed by a slow flow of water. Cercariae were able to swim or were carried away by the current up to a mean of 5 m in slow-flow waters before encysting; this distance was only 4 m in faster waters. Plants growing on the most upstream section of a watercress bed located in a drainage furrow are the most used by cercariae for their encystment, when snails live around the emergence of a source. The speed of the water current affected the number and distribution of metacercariae in the bed.

Citing Articles

Human Fascioliasis: Current Epidemiological Status and Strategies for Diagnosis, Treatment, and Control.

Caravedo M, Cabada M Res Rep Trop Med. 2020; 11:149-158.

PMID: 33273878 PMC: 7705270. DOI: 10.2147/RRTM.S237461.


Towards the comprehension of fasciolosis (re-)emergence: an integrative overview.

Alba A, Vazquez A, Hurtrez-Bousses S Parasitology. 2020; 148(4):385-407.

PMID: 33261674 PMC: 11010171. DOI: 10.1017/S0031182020002255.

References
1.
Mas-Coma S, Bargues M, Valero M . Fascioliasis and other plant-borne trematode zoonoses. Int J Parasitol. 2005; 35(11-12):1255-78. DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpara.2005.07.010. View

2.
Rondelaud D . [The water-cress pools in connection with cases of human fasciolasis in Limousin, France. Experimental studies of Trematode snails and their biological control (author's transl)]. Ann Parasitol Hum Comp. 1978; 53(6):623-30. View

3.
Dreyfuss G, Vignoles P, Rondelaud D . Fasciola hepatica: epidemiological surveillance of natural watercress beds in central France. Parasitol Res. 2005; 95(4):278-82. DOI: 10.1007/s00436-004-1269-3. View

4.
Hodasi J . The output of cercariae of Fasciola hepatica by Lymnaea truncatula and the distribution of metacercariae on grass. Parasitology. 1972; 64(1):53-60. DOI: 10.1017/s0031182000044644. View

5.
Rondelaud D, Vignoles P, Abrous M, Dreyfuss G . The definitive and intermediate hosts of Fasciola hepatica in the natural watercress beds in central France. Parasitol Res. 2001; 87(6):475-8. DOI: 10.1007/s004360100385. View