Az Echinococcus multilocularis elterjedtsége hazánkban
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Date
2015-07Author
Széll, Zoltán
Casulli, Adriano
Tolnai, Zoltán
Pozio, Edoardo
Sréter, Tamás
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SUMMARY
Human alveolar echinococcosis, caused by the tapeworm Echinococcus multilocularis,
is the most pathogenic parasitozoonosis in the temperate and arctic
region of Europe. E. multilocularis adult worms were detected in foxes of 16 Hungarian
counties and in the suburban areas of the capital, Budapest. The prevalence
of infection was 10.7% and 7.9%, the intensity of infection was 746 and 243
worms/fox in 2008–2009 and 2012–2013, respectively. The spatial distribution of
the parasite was highly clumped; the majority of infected foxes came from the
Northern Mountain Range and northern part of Transdanubia. The multi-locus
microsatellite analysis of the worms indicate that Hungary should be considered
as a peripheral area of a single European focus, where the dispersal movement
of foxes resulted in the spreading of the parasite from one county to another
within a time period short enough to avoid a substantial genetic drift. Based
on geographic information system-based analysis, mean annual temperature
and annual precipitation were the major determinants of the spatial distribution
of E. multilocularis in Hungary. It can be attributed to the sensitivity of E. multilocularis
eggs to high temperatures and desiccation. Although spreading and
emergence of the parasite was observed in Hungary before 2009, the prevalence
and intensity of infection did not change significantly between the two collection
periods. It can be explained by the considerably lower annual precipitation
before the second collection period.