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id44330 (last modified: 1.4.2018)
titleThe epidemiology and geographic distribution of relapsing fever borreliosis in West and North Africa with a review of the Ornithodoros erraticus complex (Acari: Ixodida)
year2013
paperPLoS One
edition8 [11]
page1-19
languageEnglish
checkedpaper
abstractBackground: Relapsing fever is the most frequent bacterial disease in Africa. Four main vector / pathogen complexes are classically recognized, with the louse Pediculus humanus acting as vector for B. recurrentis and the soft ticks Ornithodoros sonrai, O. erraticus and O. moubata acting as vectors for Borrelia crocidurae, B. hispanica and B. duttonii, respectively. Our aim was to investigate the epidemiology of the disease in West, North and Central Africa.
Methods And Findings: From 2002 to 2012, we conducted field surveys in 17 African countries and in Spain. We investigated the occurrence of Ornithodoros ticks in rodent burrows in 282 study sites. We collected 1,629 small mammals that may act as reservoir for Borrelia infections. Using molecular methods we studied genetic diversity among Ornithodoros ticks and Borrelia infections in ticks and small mammals. Of 9,870 burrows investigated, 1,196 (12.1%) were inhabited by Ornithodoros ticks. In West Africa, the southern and eastern limits of the vectors and Borrelia infections in ticks and small mammals were 13°N and 01°E, respectively. Molecular studies revealed the occurrence of nine different Ornithodoros species, including five species new for science, with six of them harboring Borrelia infections. Only B. crocidurae was found in West Africa and three Borrelia species were identified in North Africa: B. crocidurae, B. hispanica, and B. merionesi.
Conclusions: Borrelia Spirochetes responsible for relapsing fever in humans are highly prevalent both in Ornithodoros ticks and small mammals in North and West Africa but Ornithodoros ticks seem absent south of 13°N and small mammals are not infected in these regions. The number of Ornithodoros species acting as vector of relapsing fever is much higher than previously known.
URLhttp://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0078473Go to site
authorTrape, Jean-François
coauthorDiatta, Georges
coauthorArnathau, Céline
coauthorBitam, Idir
coauthorSarih, Mʼhammed
coauthorBelghyti, Driss
coauthorBouattour, Ali
coauthorElguero, Eric
coauthorVial, Laurence
coauthorMané, Youssouph
coauthorBaldé, Cellou
coauthorPugnolle, Franck
coauthorChauvancy, Gilles
coauthorMahé, Gil
coauthorGranjon, Laurent
coauthorDuplantier, Jean-Marc
coauthorDurand, Patrick
coauthorRenaud, François

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