Affiliations 

  • 1 Department of Public Health, Faculty of Nursing, Kobe Women's University, Kobe 650-0046, Japan; Department of Parasitology, Graduate School of Medicine, Osaka City University, Osaka 545-8585, Japan. Electronic address: uni@med.osaka-cu.ac.jp
  • 2 Institute for Research Promotion, Oita University, Oita 879-5593, Japan
  • 3 Department of Public Health, Faculty of Nursing, Kobe Women's University, Kobe 650-0046, Japan
  • 4 Department of Environmental Medicine, Kochi Medical School, Kochi University, Nankoku 783-8505, Japan
  • 5 Agriculture Research Center, National Agriculture and Food Research Organization, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8666, Japan
  • 6 Hikiiwa Park Center, Tanabe, Wakayama 646-0051, Japan
  • 7 Department of Environmental Biology and Chemistry, Faculty of Science, University of Toyama, Toyama 930-8555, Japan
  • 8 Department of Health, Sports, and Nutrition, Faculty of Health and Welfare, Kobe Women's University, Kobe 650-0046, Japan
  • 9 Tropical Infectious Diseases Research & Education Centre, Universiti Malaya, Kuala Lumpur 50603, Malaysia
Parasitol Int, 2021 Aug;83:102313.
PMID: 33662527 DOI: 10.1016/j.parint.2021.102313

Abstract

Reports of zoonotic infections with Onchocerca japonica (Nematoda: Filarioidea), which parasitizes the Japanese wild boar, Sus scrofa leucomystax, have recently increased in Japan. To predict the occurrence of infection in humans, it is necessary to determine the prevalence of O. japonica infection in the natural host animals. We investigated the presence of adult worms in the footpads, and of microfilariae in skin snips, taken from the host animals, between 2000 and 2018. Onchocerca japonica was found in 165 of 223 (74%) Japanese wild boars in Honshu and Kyushu. Among the nine regions studied, the highest prevalence of O. japonica infection was found in Oita, Kyushu, where 47 of 52 (90.4%) animals were infected. The ears were the predilection sites for O. japonica microfilariae. Adult worms of O. japonica were found more frequently in the hindlimbs than in the forelimbs of the host animals. Onchocerca takaokai was found in 14 of 52 (26.9%) Japanese wild boars in Oita. In Kakeroma Island among the Nansei Islands, both O. japonica and O. takaokai were isolated from the Ryukyu wild boar, S. s. riukiuanus. These observations could help predict future occurrences of human zoonotic onchocercosis in Japan.

* Title and MeSH Headings from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

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