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Volume 17, Number 7—July 2011
Letter

Endemic Angiostrongyliasis, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

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To the Editor: The nematode Angiostrongylus cantonensis (rat lung worm), a zoonotic parasite that can accidentally infect humans and cause eosinophilic meningoencephalitis, has the Norway rat (Rattus norvegicus) as one of its most frequent definitive vertebrate hosts (1). Adult worms live in the pulmonary arteries of the definitive hosts, which excrete first-stage larvae in their feces. Intermediate hosts, such as snails and slugs, are infected by first-stage larvae, which reach the infective third stage after 2 molts. Third-stage larvae are then ingested by rats as they feed on the intermediate hosts, thus closing the life cycle. Humans become infected by eating raw or undercooked snails and slugs and through paratemic hosts and vegetables contaminated with infected snail mucus (2).

In Brazil, the first 3 documented cases of eosinophilic meningoencephalitis occurred in 2007 in 2 cities in the southeastern state of Espírito Santo (3). In 2009, a new case was reported in Pernambuco in the northeast region (4). Only intermediate hosts have been found naturally infected with rat lung worm in Brazil. Infected terrestrial and freshwater snails of the species Achatina fulica, Sarasinula marginata, Subulina octona, and Bradybaena similaris in Espírito Santo; A. fulica and Pomacea lineata in Pernambuco; and A. fulica in Rio de Janeiro and Santa Catarina have been reported (3,5,6). Thus, because of the recent cases of eosinophilic meningoencephalitis in Brazil and the occurrence of naturally infected A. fulica snails in Rio de Janeiro, we investigated the existence of potential natural reservoirs for the parasite in São Gonçalo.

São Gonçalo (22°48′26.7′′S, 43°00′49.1′′W) is a densely populated city (≈1 million inhabitants) with a tropical Atlantic climate (14°C–35°C) that is part of the metropolitan region of Rio de Janeiro. Two collections were made in March and June 2010. Forty live traps (20 Tomahawk [Tomahawk Live Trap Company, Tomahawk, WI, USA] and 20 Sherman [H.B. Sherman Traps Inc., Tallahassee, FL, USA] traps) were placed along two 30-m transects for 4 consecutive nights (Brazilian Institute of Environment and Renewable Natural Resources license no. 2227–1/2010) in an urban area where A. fulica snails had been collected in high numbers. Twenty-seven Norway rats (16 males) were captured. We collected 265 adult lung worms from the pulmonary arteries of the captured animals, fixed the worms in 70% ethanol, and taxonomically identified them as A. cantonensis on the basis of the large size of the spicules and the patterns of the bursal rays (7). Voucher specimens have been deposited in the Helminthological Collection of the Oswaldo Cruz Institute (no. 35712). Nineteen (74%) rats were infected; mean intensity and mean abundance were 13.52 ± 2.36 and 9.81 ± 1.96, respectively.

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Thumbnail of Neighbor-joining phylogenetic tree based on Kimura 2-parameter (K2-p) distances that includes all Angiostrongylus COI sequences in GenBank and the sequences obtained from 3 Angiostrongylus specimens recovered from the pulmonary arteries of a naturally infected Norway rat (Rattus norvegicus) from São Gonçalo, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 2010. The specimens yielded 1 haplotype, which clustered together with the A. cantonensis haplotype from the People’s Republic of China with a low geneti

Figure. Neighbor-joining phylogenetic tree based on Kimura 2-parameter (K2-p) distances that includes all Angiostrongylus COI sequences in GenBank and the sequences obtained from 3 Angiostrongylus specimens recovered from the pulmonary arteries of...

To confirm the morphologic identification of the Angiostrongylus specimens obtained, a DNA bar coding approach was used. DNA was extracted from 3 ethanol-preserved adult worms previously recovered from the pulmonary arteries of a naturally infected Norway rat, PCR-amplified, sequenced for a partial region of the COI gene (8), and subsequently compared with available GenBank Angiostrongylus spp. sequences. The three 360-bp COI sequences obtained (GenBank accession no. HQ440217) were Clustal-aligned (www.clustal.org) with homologous COI fragments of A. cantonensis (GenBank accession no. GQ398121), A. vasorum (GenBank accession nos. EU493162, EU493163, EU493166, EU493167), and A. costaricensis (GenBank accession no. GQ398122) and subjected to phylogenetic analysis. Ancylostoma tubaeforme (GenBank accession no. AJ407940) was used as the outgroup. Haplotypes for A. vasorum isolates from Brazil (A. vasorum 5421, 5641, and 5642) were reconstructed from published information (9) and included in the alignment. We used MEGA4 (www.megasoftware.net) to construct a neighbor-joining phylogenetic tree based on Kimura 2-parameter (K2-p) distances (Figure). The 3 A. cantonensis specimens from São Gonçalo, Rio de Janeiro, yielded a single haplotype, which formed a clade with the A. cantonensis haplotype from the People’s Republic of China with low genetic distance (K2-p 0.038) and high bootstrap support (98), thus confirming the morphologic identification. Comparisons with the other 2 Angiostrongylus species yielded higher genetic distance values (K2-p 0.120, with A. vasorum, and 0.149, with A. costaricensis).

These results indicate that A. cantonensis lung worm infection is enzootic among the exotic Norway rat population in the region studied. The natural infection rate of 74% is the second highest reported among 14 severely A. cantonensis infection–endemic regions (2). These findings, together with the observation of dense populations of A. fulica snails in urban areas of the country (10), call attention to the risk for disease transmission to humans, given that Norway rats also are likely to be present in these areas.

Local residents should be informed about disease transmission and prevention, and physicians should consider A. cantonensis lung worm infection in the differential diagnosis when appropriate. Although public health authorities should consider implementation of surveillance and control strategies to reduce the populations of snail and rat hosts, a better understanding is needed of the epidemiologic significance of these findings, which can be attained through studies to identify human cases of eosinophilic meningitis in the region.

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Acknowledgments

We thank the anonymous reviewers whose comments and suggestions helped improve an earlier version of the manuscript.

This study was supported by the Brazilian Research Council.

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Raquel O. Simões, Fernando A. Monteiro, Elizabeth Sánchez, Silvana C. Thiengo, Juberlan S. Garcia, Sócrates F. Costa-Neto, José L. Luque, and Arnaldo MaldonadoComments to Author 
Author affiliations: Author affiliations: Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (R.O. Simões, F.A. Monteiro, E. Sánchez, S.C. Thiengo, J.S. Garcia, S.F. Costa-Neto, A. Maldonado Jr.); Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro, Seropédica, Brazil (R.O. Simões, J.L. Luque)

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References

  1. Lindo  JF, Waugh  C, Hall  J, Canningham-Myrie  C, Ashley  D, Eberhard  ML, Enzootic Angiostrongylus cantonensis in rats and snails after an outbreak of an human eosinophlic meningitis, Jamaica. Emerg Infect Dis. 2002;8:3246. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
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DOI: 10.3201/eid1707.101822

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Arnaldo Maldonado Jr, Laboratório de Biologia e Parasitologia de Mamíferos Silvestres Reservatórios, Instituto Oswaldo Cruz/Fiocruz, Av. Brasil 4365 Manguinhos 21.040-900, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil

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Page created: August 18, 2011
Page updated: August 18, 2011
Page reviewed: August 18, 2011
The conclusions, findings, and opinions expressed by authors contributing to this journal do not necessarily reflect the official position of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Public Health Service, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or the authors' affiliated institutions. Use of trade names is for identification only and does not imply endorsement by any of the groups named above.
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