» Articles » PMID: 36468877

Human and Animal Fascioliasis: Origins and Worldwide Evolving Scenario

Overview
Specialty Microbiology
Date 2022 Dec 5
PMID 36468877
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Fascioliasis is a plant- and waterborne zoonotic parasitic disease caused by two trematode species: (i) Fasciola hepatica in Europe, Asia, Africa, the Americas, and Oceania and (ii) , which is restricted to Africa and Asia. Fasciolid liver flukes infect mainly herbivores as ruminants, equids, and camelids but also omnivore mammals as humans and swine and are transmitted by freshwater Lymnaeidae snail vectors. Two phases may be distinguished in fasciolid evolution. The long predomestication period includes the origin in east-southern Africa around the mid-Miocene, the origin in the Near-Middle East of Asia around the latest Miocene to Early Pliocene, and their subsequent local spread. The short postdomestication period includes the worldwide spread by human-guided movements of animals in the last 12,000 years and the more recent transoceanic anthropogenic introductions of into the Americas and Oceania and of into several large islands of the Pacific with ships transporting livestock in the last 500 years. The routes and chronology of the spreading waves followed by both fasciolids into the five continents are redefined on the basis of recently generated knowledge of human-guided movements of domesticated hosts. No local, zonal, or regional situation showing disagreement with historical records was found, although in a few world zones the available knowledge is still insufficient. The anthropogenically accelerated evolution of fasciolids allows us to call them "peridomestic endoparasites." The multidisciplinary implications for crucial aspects of the disease should therefore lead the present baseline update to be taken into account in future research studies.

Citing Articles

Potentially pathogenic free-living amoebae at very high altitude: Detection by multiplex qPCR in the Northern Altiplano fascioliasis hyperendemic area in Bolivia.

Perez-Perez P, Artigas P, Reyes-Batlle M, Cordoba-Lanus E, Rodriguez-Exposito R, Cuervo P One Health. 2025; 20:100985.

PMID: 40035019 PMC: 11874821. DOI: 10.1016/j.onehlt.2025.100985.


Heterogeneous zonal impacts of climate change on a wide hyperendemic area of human and animal fascioliasis assessed within a One Health action for prevention and control.

Cuervo P, Bargues M, Artigas P, Buchon P, Angles R, Mas-Coma S PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2025; 19(1):e0012820.

PMID: 39836654 PMC: 11771920. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0012820.


Evaluating the In Vitro Anthelmintic Activity of Zinc Oxide Nanoparticles (ZnO-NPs) Against the Adult Stages of Fasciola hepatica.

Abdelhamid M, Fouad D, Alian A, Nasr A, Abd-Allah H, Farouk M Vet Med Sci. 2025; 11(1):e70170.

PMID: 39823262 PMC: 11740981. DOI: 10.1002/vms3.70170.


Unraveling the microRNAs Involved in Fasciolosis: Master Regulators of the Host-Parasite Crosstalk.

Barrero-Torres D, Herrera-Torres G, Perez J, Martinez-Moreno A, Martinez-Moreno F, Flores-Velazquez L Int J Mol Sci. 2025; 26(1.

PMID: 39796061 PMC: 11719827. DOI: 10.3390/ijms26010204.


Liver fluke and schistosome cross-infection risk between livestock and wild mammals in Western Uganda, a One Health approach.

Namirembe D, Huyse T, Wangalwa R, Tumusiime J, Tolo C Int J Parasitol Parasites Wildl. 2024; 25:101022.

PMID: 39687763 PMC: 11648790. DOI: 10.1016/j.ijppaw.2024.101022.


References
1.
Valero M, Bargues M, Calderon L, Artigas P, Mas-Coma S . First phenotypic and genotypic description of Fasciola hepatica infecting highland cattle in the state of Mexico, Mexico. Infect Genet Evol. 2018; 64:231-240. DOI: 10.1016/j.meegid.2018.06.032. View

2.
Bargues M, Artigas P, Khoubbane M, Flores R, Gloer P, Rojas-Garcia R . Lymnaea schirazensis, an overlooked snail distorting fascioliasis data: genotype, phenotype, ecology, worldwide spread, susceptibility, applicability. PLoS One. 2011; 6(9):e24567. PMC: 3183092. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0024567. View

3.
ALICATA J . Human fascioliasis in the Hawaiian Islands. Hawaii Med J. 1953; 12(3):196-201. View

4.
Thang T, Hakim H, Rahimi R, Ichikawa-Seki M . Molecular analysis reveals expansion of Fasciola hepatica distribution from Afghanistan to China. Parasitol Int. 2019; 72:101930. DOI: 10.1016/j.parint.2019.101930. View

5.
Sazmand A, Bahari A, Papi S, Otranto D . Parasitic diseases of equids in Iran (1931-2020): a literature review. Parasit Vectors. 2020; 13(1):586. PMC: 7676409. DOI: 10.1186/s13071-020-04472-w. View