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Coxiella burnetii in Humans and Ticks in Rural Senegal
Authors:Oleg Mediannikov  Florence Fenollar  Cristina Socolovschi  Georges Diatta  Hubert Bassene  Jean-Fran?ois Molez  Cheikh Sokhna  Jean-Fran?ois Trape  Didier Raoult
Affiliation:1. URMITE, UMR IRD 198/CNRS 6236, Mediterranean University, Medical Faculty, Marseille, France.; 2. URMITE, UMR IRD 198/CNRS 6236, Dakar, Senegal.;University of Tennessee, United States of America
Abstract:

Background

Q fever is a worldwide zoonotic disease caused by Coxiella burnetii. Epidemiologically, animals are considered reservoirs and humans incidental hosts.

Methodology/Principal Findings

We investigated Q fever in rural Senegal. Human samples (e.g., sera, saliva, breast milk, feces) were screened in the generally healthy population of two villages of the Sine-Saloum region. Ticks were collected in four regions. Seroprevalence was studied by immunofluorescence, and all other samples were tested by two qPCR systems for detection of C. burnetii. Positive samples were genotyped (multispacer typing) by amplification and sequencing of three spacers. Strains were isolated by cell culture. We found that the seroprevalence may be as high as 24.5% (59 of 238 studied) in Dielmo village. We identified spontaneous excretion of C. burnetii by humans through faeces and milk. Hard and soft ticks (8 species) were infected in 0–37.6%. We identified three genotypes of C. burnetii. The previously identified genotype 6 was the most common in ticks in all studied regions and the only one found in human samples. Three strains of genotype 6 of C. burnetii were also recovered from soft tick Ornithodoros sonrai. Two other genotypes found in ticks, 35 and 36, were identified for the first time.

Conclusions/Significance

Q fever should be considered a significant public health threat in Senegal. Humans, similar to other mammals, may continuously excrete C. burnetii.
Keywords:
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