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Pork as a source of transmission of Toxoplasma gondii to humans: a parasite burden study in pig tissues after infection with different strains of Toxoplasma gondii as a function of time and different parasite stages
Authors:Ignacio Gisbert Algaba  Bavo Verhaegen  Malgorzata Jennes  Mizanur Rahman  Wim Coucke  Eric Cox  Pierre Dorny  Katelijne Dierick  Stéphane De Craeye
Institution:1. Scientific Institute of Public Health, Communicable and Infectious Diseases, National Reference Center for Toxoplasmosis, 1050 Brussels, Belgium;2. Department of Virology, Parasitology and Immunology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Ghent University, 9820 Merelbeke, Belgium;3. Scientific Institute of Public Health, Quality of Medical Laboratories, 1050 Brussels, Belgium;4. Department of Biomedical Sciences, Institute of Tropical Medicine, 2000 Antwerp, Belgium
Abstract:Toxoplasma gondii is an ubiquitous apicomplexan parasite which can infect any warm-blooded animal including humans. Humans and carnivores/omnivores can also become infected by consumption of raw or undercooked infected meat containing muscle cysts. This route of transmission is considered to account for at least 30% of human toxoplasmosis cases. To better assess the role of pork as a source of infection for humans, the parasite burden resulting from experimental infection with different parasite stages and different strains of T. gondii during the acute and chronic phases was studied. The parasite burden in different tissues was measured with a ISO 17025 validated Magnetic Capture-quantitative PCR. A high burden of infection was found in heart and lungs during the acute phase of infection and heart and brain were identified as the most parasitised tissues during the chronic phase of infection, independent of the parasite stage and the strain used. Remarkably, a higher parasite burden was measured in different tissues following infection with oocysts of a type II strain compared with a tissue cyst infection with three strains of either type II or a type I/II. However, these results could have been affected by the use of different strains and euthanasia time points. The parasite burden resulting from a tissue cyst infection was not significantly different between the two strains.
Keywords:Meat  Magnetic capture  Quantitative PCR  Pig  Parasitic load
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