Skip to main navigation Skip to main content
  • KSPTM
  • E-Submission

PHD : Parasites, Hosts and Diseases

OPEN ACCESS
ABOUT
BROWSE ARTICLES
FOR CONTRIBUTORS

Page Path

1
results for

"Selim M’rad"

Article category

Keywords

Publication year

Authors

Funded articles

"Selim M’rad"

Brief Communication
Environmental Contamination by Echinococcus granulosus sensu lato Eggs in Relation to Slaughterhouses in Urban and Rural Areas in Tunisia
Raja Cha?bane-Banaoues, Myriam Oudni-M’rad, Selim M’rad, Habib Mezhoud, Hamouda Babba
Korean J Parasitol 2016;54(1):113-118.
Published online February 26, 2016
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3347/kjp.2016.54.1.113
Hydatidosis has become a real concern for health care institutions and animal rearers in Tunisia. The Tunisian endemicity is aggravated by the growing number of dogs and the difficulty of getting rid of contaminated viscera because of the lack of equipment in most slaughterhouses. Therefore, microscopic and molecular tools were applied to evaluate the role of slaughterhouses in canine infection and Echinococcus granulosus sensu lato (s. l.) egg dissemination. Exposure risk to E. granulosus s. l. eggs in urban and rural areas was explored in order to implant preventive and adapted control strategies. Microscopic examinations detected taeniid eggs in 152 amongst 553 fecal samples. The copro-PCR demonstrated that 138 of 152 taeniid samples analyzed were positive for E. granulosus s. l. DNA. PCR-RFLP demonstrated that all isolated samples belonged to E. granulosus sensu stricto (s. s.). An important environmental contamination index (25.0%) by E. granulosus s. l. eggs was demonstrated. The average contamination index from the regions around slaughterhouses (23.3%; 95% CI: 17.7-28.9%) was in the same range as detected in areas located far from slaughterhouses (26.0%, 95% CI: 21.3-30.8%). Echinococcosis endemic areas were extended in both rural (29.9%, 95% CI: 24.8-34.9%) and urban locations (18.1%, 95% CI: 13.0-22.9%). The pathogen dissemination is related neither to the presence/absence of slaughterhouses nor to the location in urban or rural areas, but is probably influenced by human activities (home slaughtering) and behavior towards the infected viscera.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  Crossref logo
  • Zoonotic threat of cystic echinococcosis in Tunisia: insights into livestock prevalence and identification of the G1 genotype
    Mohamed Hedi Abdelghani, Selim M’rad, Raja Chaâbane-Banaoues, Sayadi Taoufik, Mohamed Ali Charfedine, Lamia Zemzemi, Ines Kamoun, Hamouda Babba, Myriam Oudni-M’rad
    Frontiers in Veterinary Science.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Synthetic rEg.P29 Peptides Induce Protective Immune Responses Against Echinococcus granulosus in Mice
    Yongxue Lv, Jing Tang, Tao Li, Yinqi Zhao, Changyou Wu, Wei Zhao
    Vaccines.2025; 13(3): 266.     CrossRef
  • Environmental contamination with feces of free-roaming dogs and the risk of transmission of Echinococcus and Taenia species in urban regions of southeastern Iran
    Saeedeh Shamsaddini, Carina Schneider, Sonja Dumendiak, Hossein Aghassi, Hossein Kamyabi, Elham Akhlaghi, Marion Wassermann, Majid Fasihi Harandi, Peter Deplazes, Thomas Romig
    Parasites & Vectors.2024;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Global distribution of Echinococcus granulosus genotypes in domestic and wild canids: a systematic review and meta-analysis
    Morteza Shams, Sasan Khazaei, Razi Naserifar, Seyyed Ali Shariatzadeh, Davood Anvari, Fattaneh Montazeri, Majid Pirestani, Hamidreza Majidiani
    Parasitology.2022; 149(9): 1147.     CrossRef
  • Detection of Echinococcus granulosus sensu lato in Environmental Samples from Ibadan, Oyo State, South West Nigeria
    Emmanuel Jolaoluwa Awosanya, Adeola Olagbaju, Angela Peruzzu, Gabriella Masu, Giovanna Masala, Piero Bonelli
    Veterinary Sciences.2022; 9(12): 679.     CrossRef
  • Human and animal cystic echinococcosis in Tataouine governorate: hypoendemic area in a hyperendemic country, myth or reality?
    Selim M’rad, Raja Chaâbane-Banaoues, Massaouda Ghrab, Hamouda Babba, Myriam Oudni-M’rad
    Parasites & Vectors.2021;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Dispersion of Echinococcus granulosus eggs from infected dogs under natural conditions in Patagonia, Argentina
    P. Sánchez Thevenet, H.M. Alvarez, C. Torrecillas, O. Jensen, J.A. Basualdo
    Journal of Helminthology.2020;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Molecular identification of Echinococcus granulosus sensu lato by mitochondrial COX1 and SSU-rDNA markers in dogs in the west of Iran
    Seyed-Reza Mirbadie, Masoomeh Zivdari, Hamed Kalani, Mohammad-Reza Vafaei, Shahrokh Izadi, Zahra Jabalameli, Mohsen Mohammadi, Ganesh Yadagiri, Peyman Heydarian, Farzaneh Mirzaei, Mohammad-Ali Mohaghegh
    Gene Reports.2020; 19: 100616.     CrossRef
  • Reinventing the Wheel of Echinococcus granulosus sensu lato Transmission to Humans
    Francesca Tamarozzi, Peter Deplazes, Adriano Casulli
    Trends in Parasitology.2020; 36(5): 427.     CrossRef
  • Parasitological Contamination of Vegetables Sold in Tunisian Retail Markets with Helminth Eggs and Protozoan Cysts
    Selim M'rad, Raja Chaabane-Banaoues, Ibtissem Lahmar, Hamza Oumaima, Habib Mezhoud, Hamouda Babba, Myriam Oudni-M'rad
    Journal of Food Protection.2020; 83(7): 1104.     CrossRef
  • Environmental, climatic and host population risk factors of human cystic echinococcosis in southwest of Iran
    Mohammad Amin Ghatee, Koorosh Nikaein, Walter Robert Taylor, Mehdi Karamian, Hasan Alidadi, Zahra Kanannejad, Faezeh Sehatpour, Fateme Zarei, Gholamreza Pouladfar
    BMC Public Health.2020;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Molecular phylodiagnosis of Echinococcus granulosus sensu lato and Taenia hydatigena determined by mitochondrial Cox1 and SSU-rDNA markers in Iranian dogs: Indicating the first record of pig strain (G7) in definitive host in the Middle East
    Seyed Reza Mirbadie, Abbas Najafi Nasab, Mohammad Ali Mohaghegh, Pirasteh Norouzi, Mehdi Mirzaii, Adel Spotin
    Comparative Immunology, Microbiology and Infectious Diseases.2019; 65: 88.     CrossRef
  • Molecular characterization of Echinococcus species in dogs from four regions of Kenya
    Erastus Mulinge, Japhet Magambo, David Odongo, Sammy Njenga, Eberhard Zeyhle, Cecilia Mbae, Dorothy Kagendo, Francis Addy, Dennis Ebi, Marion Wassermann, Peter Kern, Thomas Romig
    Veterinary Parasitology.2018; 255: 49.     CrossRef
  • Preliminary studies on the prevalence and genotyping of Echinococcus granulosus infection in stray dogs in Van Province, Turkey
    Bekir Oguz, Nalan Ozdal, Ozlem Orunc Kilinc, M. Serdar Deger
    Journal of Veterinary Research.2018; 62(4): 497.     CrossRef
  • Hydatid Recurrence Medically Treated by Albendazole
    Imen Khammari, Mohamed Amine El Ghali, Salsabil Nasri, Imen Dhib, Hamed Chouaieb, Alia Yaacoub, Moncef Ben Said, Rached Letaief, Akila Fathallah
    The Open Parasitology Journal.2018; 6(1): 1.     CrossRef
  • First molecular identification of Echinococcus vogeli and Echinococcus granulosus (sensu stricto) G1 revealed in feces of domestic dogs (Canis familiaris) from Acre, Brazil
    Leandro Batista das Neves, Paulo Eduardo Ferlini Teixeira, Sidnei Silva, Fernanda Bittencourt de Oliveira, Daniel Daipert Garcia, Fernanda Barbosa de Almeida, Rosângela Rodrigues-Silva, José Roberto Machado-Silva
    Parasites & Vectors.2017;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Cystic Echinococcosis in the Mediterranean
    Tommaso Manciulli, M. Mariconti, A. Vola, R. Lissandrin, E. Brunetti
    Current Tropical Medicine Reports.2017; 4(4): 235.     CrossRef
  • Analysis of Lethality in Echinococcal Disease
    Anna S. Khachatryan
    The Korean Journal of Parasitology.2017; 55(5): 549.     CrossRef
  • 11,405 View
  • 121 Download
  • 14 Web of Science
  • Crossref