埃及尼罗河三角洲东部土壤、蔬菜和青饲料中土壤传播寄生虫的调查研究。

IF 1.4 Q3 PARASITOLOGY Journal of Parasitology Research Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1155/2023/6300563
Samah H Yahia, Samia E Etewa, Abd Allah A Al Hoot, Salwa Z Arafa, Nesreen S Saleh, Mohamed H Sarhan, Suzan I Rashad, Shimaa S Hassan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:食源性寄生虫是人类和动物疾病的主要来源,在土壤污染、水质差、清洁度和卫生条件差的地方构成严重的健康风险。使用未经处理的有机肥,这些有机肥是从寄生虫的最终宿主人或动物的排泄物中产生的,污染了农业土壤,并反映在其蔬菜和绿色饲料的产品中,造成严重的健康问题。因此,据我们所知,这将是第一个调查埃及东尼罗河三角洲农业土壤及其生食蔬菜和绿色饲料产品寄生虫污染的研究。目的:本研究的目的是调查从埃及东尼罗河三角洲露天田地采集的常用生蔬菜、青饲料和土壤样品中寄生虫造成的污染类型和程度。研究过程。横断面研究包括简单随机收集400个土壤样本,180个绿色饲料样本,以及400个蔬菜样本,包括生菜,萝卜,香菜,欧芹,莳萝,豆瓣菜,西红柿,青椒,黄瓜和胡萝卜,这些样本收集于2021年1月至12月的一年时间内,代表了所有季节(冬,春,夏,秋)。研究地点选自埃及东尼罗河三角洲各种开放的绿色田野和农业地区,这些地区生产供人类食用的即食蔬菜和种植供动物饲养的绿色饲料。采用沉淀法、浮选法和染色法等浓缩方法,回收了数量最多的寄生生物。利用生物特征和成像数据鉴定了发现的寄生虫结构,并与已知的寄生虫形态进行了比较。采用SPSS软件22 (IBM, Chicago, IL, USA)进行统计分析。数据以数字和百分比表示。p值等于或小于0.05被认为具有统计学意义。采用卡方检验比较不同品类间寄生污染的差异。结果:400份土壤样品中寄生虫污染阳性243份(60.7%)(P < 0.05)。400份蔬菜样品中有249份(62.25%)显著存在多种寄生形式,其中65.1%显著存在1种寄生形式,9.2%显著存在3种寄生形式。蛔虫卵、鞭虫卵和贾第鞭毛虫囊是最常见的寄生虫,主要从表面不平整的蔬菜中分离出来。180份青饲料中有109份(60.0%)寄生虫污染呈不显著阳性。蔬菜样品中寄生虫污染比例不显著,春季最高(29.3%),夏季次之(27.7%),秋季最高(24.5%)。冬季患病率最低,为20.1%。结论和建议。我们的研究结果表明,在埃及尼罗河三角洲东部的露天田地中种植的生蔬菜和绿色饲料及其母土中存在大量寄生虫,特别是土壤传播的寄生虫感染。这些结果证实,迫切需要对土壤采取严格的控制措施,特别是在生食蔬菜和绿色饲料的收获前阶段,这是减少土壤传播寄生虫通过食源性传播给人和动物的关键步骤。
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Investigating the Occurrence of Soil-Transmitted Parasites Contaminating Soil, Vegetables, and Green Fodder in the East of Nile Delta, Egypt.

Background: Food-borne parasites are major sources of human and animal illness, posing severe health risks in places with contaminated soil, poor water quality, cleanliness, and poor sanitation. The usage of untreated organic fertilizers arising from the excreta of the parasites' definitive hosts either man or animal pollutes the agricultural soil and is reflected in its products of vegetables and green fodders causing serious health problems. Therefore, to the best of our knowledge, this will be the first study that investigated the combination of parasitic contamination of the agricultural soil and its products of raw eaten vegetables and green fodder in East Nile Delta, Egypt.

Aim: The purpose of this study was to investigate the type and degree of contamination caused by parasites in regularly used raw vegetables, green fodder, and soil samples collected from open fields in Egypt's East Nile Delta. Study Procedures. A cross-sectional study comprised a simple random collection of 400 soil samples, 180 green fodder samples, and as well as 400 vegetable samples, including lettuce, radish, coriander, parsley, dill, watercress, tomatoes, green pepper, cucumber, and carrot, that were gathered throughout one year period from January to December 2021 to represent all seasons (winter, spring, summer, and autumn). The research locations were chosen from various open green fields and farming regions in Egypt's East Nile Delta producing ready-to-eat vegetables for human consumptions and planting green fodder for animal feeding. Concentrations, including sedimentation, and flotation, and staining techniques were used to recover the greatest number of parasitic life forms. The parasitic structures discovered were identified using biometric and imaging data and compared with known parasite morphology. Statistical analysis was performed with the SPSS software version 22 (IBM, Chicago, IL, USA). Data were presented in numbers and percentages. P-values equal to or less than 0.05 were considered to be statistically significant. The difference in parasitic contamination among the different categories was compared using the chi-square test.

Results: In this investigation, 243 out of 400 soil samples (60.7%) confirmed positive for parasitic contamination (P < 0.05). Various parasitic life forms were significantly found in 249 out of 400 (62.25%) of the vegetable samples, with (65.1%) of them harboring one parasite species, whereas 9.2% significantly contained up to three parasites. Ascaris eggs, Trichuris eggs, and Giardia cysts were the most prevalent parasites, which were predominantly isolated from vegetables with uneven surfaces. 109 of 180 (60.0%) green fodder samples confirmed insignificantly positive for parasitic pollution. The proportion of parasite contamination in vegetable samples was insignificant although the highest was in spring (29.3%), followed by summer (27.7%), whereas it is significant in autumn (24.5%). The prevalence rate was the lowest in winter (20.1%). Conclusion and Recommendations. Our findings demonstrated a significant load of parasites notably the soil-transmitted parasitic infection in raw vegetables and green fodder cultivated in open fields as well as in their mother soil in the east of the Nile Delta, Egypt. These results confirm the urgent need to deploy strict control measures to the soil, especially during the pre-harvest period of raw eaten vegetables and green fodder, a critical step in reducing food-borne transmission of soil-transmitted parasites to man and animals.

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来源期刊
Journal of Parasitology Research
Journal of Parasitology Research Medicine-Infectious Diseases
CiteScore
3.50
自引率
9.10%
发文量
49
审稿时长
13 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Parasitology Research is a peer-reviewed, Open Access journal that publishes original research articles, review articles, and clinical studies in all areas of basic and applied parasitology. Articles covering host-parasite relationships and parasitic diseases will be considered, as well as studies on disease vectors. Articles highlighting social and economic issues around the impact of parasites are also encouraged. As an international, Open Access publication, Journal of Parasitology Research aims to foster learning and collaboration between countries and communities.
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