Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal | All issues | Volume 12, 2006 | Volume 12, issue 3/4 | Meriones libycus is the main reservoir of zoonotic cutaneous leishmaniasis in south Islamic Republic of Iran

Meriones libycus is the main reservoir of zoonotic cutaneous leishmaniasis in south Islamic Republic of Iran

Print

PDF version

Y. Rassi,1 E. Javadian,1 M. Amin,1 S. Rafizadeh,1 H.Vatandoost1 and H. Motazedian1

ABSTRACT A study was made in rural regions around Neiriz city, Fars province in the south of the Islamic Republic of Iran during 2002–03 to further investigate a new focus of zoonotic cutaneous leishmaniasis. Meriones libycus was the dominant rodent (100% of 65 rodents collected) and 4.6% were naturally infected with the amastigote form of Leishmania spp. Promasigotes were identified as L. major. This confirms M. libycus as the main reservoir host of zoonotic cutaneous leishmaniasis in southern parts of the country.

Meriones libycus, principal réservoir de leishmaniose cutanée zoonosique dans le sud de la République islamique d’Iran

RÉSUMÉ Une étude a été réalisée dans une région rurale autour de la ville de Neiriz, province de Fars, dans le sud de la République islamique d’Iran durant les années 2002-2003 pour approfondir les recherches sur un nouveau foyer de leishmaniose cutanée zoonosique. Meriones libycus était le principal rongeur (100 % des 65 rongeurs capturés) et 4,6 % étaient naturellement infectés par la forme amastigote de Leishmania sp. Les promastigotes ont été identifiés comme L. major. Ceci confirme que M. libycus est le principal réservoir hôte de la leishmaniose cutanée zoonosique dans les parties méridionales du pays.

1School of Public Health and Institute of Health Research, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran (Correspondence to Y. Rassi: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it ).
Received: 18/07/04; accepted: 25/10/04
EMHJ, 2006, 12(3-4): 474-477


Introduction

Zoonotic cutaneous leishmaniasis (ZCL) is an important health problem in many countries of the Mediterranean area as well as in the Islamic Republic of Iran. There are several foci of disease in the country [1–11]. In the last decade, the annual incidence of ZCL has been rising gradually; the total number of cases increased from 1560 to 3861 during 1991–2001 (unpublished data, Ministry of Health, Islamic Republic of Iran). In 1999 a new focus of ZCL, with a high incidence (850.9 per 100 000), was found in some villages of Arsanjan city, Fars province, in the southern part of the Islamic Republic of Iran. Increasing sandfly–human contact is believed to be occurring due to agricultural development in many parts of these areas and this leads to more exposure to infection. Detection of Leishmania spp. is not always easy in wild rodents, because the parasite may cause no or only minor skin lesions in these animals [12].

A previous study in Arsanjan showed that Meriones libycus was the principal reservoir of ZCL in the area [13]. The objective of the present study in Neiriz, an adjacent city to Arsanjan, was to collect further data from this new focus of ZCL.

Methods

The study was carried out in rural areas around Neiriz city, Fars province (28 42 N, 53 25 E, altitude 1620 m). The population was 96 929 in 1996 and their main activities are agriculture and animal farming.

Rodents were captured monthly by Sherman live traps baited with roasted walnuts during October 2002 to March 2003 from the villages of Gassem-Abad, Gale-Bahman and Kooh-Sorkh. After identifying active colonies adjacent to selected villages, traps were set near the rodent’s burrows in the mornings and evenings twice a month. Rodents were identified according to the national systematic key [14].

Impression smears were taken from the rodents’ ears and investigated microscopically for amastigotes. Smears from infected animals were injected into Balb/c mice. The parasites from infected mice were cultured and the isolated promastigotes were identified from nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR) techniques, using standard methods [15], as described in our earlier paper [13].

Results

In Neiriz city, 65 rodents were collected during the study period; all (100%) were identified as M. libycus. Three (4.6%) were infected with amastigotes. Isolated parasites were injected into 10 mice; nodules and ulcers were recognized in 5 mice after 1 month. The promastigotes isolated were identified as L. major using PCR.

Discussion

This finding in Neiriz confirms our previous study in Arsanjan [13] that M. libycus is the main reservoir host of ZCL in southern Islamic Republic of Iran. No other species (for example Rhombomys opimus or Tatera indica) were captured in the study areas. L. major has been isolated from M. libycus in central parts of the Islamic Republic of Iran [16], Uzbekistan [17], the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya [18] and Saudi Arabia [19].

There are currently 3 zones of ZCL in the Islamic Republic of Iran. The 1st zone is the centre and north-east, including Isfahan, Esfarayen, Lotf-Abad and Bekran-Shahrood. The great gerbil, R. opimus, is active in these areas and shows high infection rates (44%–100%) [1,5,7]. The 2nd zone is located in the west of the Islamic Republic of Iran, where T. indica is the primary and main reservoir of disease with a 12.5% infection rate [7,9]. In both the above zones, M. libycus is a secondary reservoir host with a low infection rate and does not play a key role in maintaining the disease. The 3rd zone is in the south-east in Baluchistan [11]. Here M. hurrianeh is the main reservoir; we have not captured M. libycus from Baluchistan. In recent years, human cases of ZCL were observed to be endemic in Isfahan (central Islamic Republic of Iran), which borders Fars province. In this region, M. libycus is the main reservoir with a high infection rate (6.8%–25%) [13,16,20].

According to our findings, it seems that a 4th zone of ZCL has become established in the south of the Islamic Republic of Iran. In this area, M. libycus is the primary and main reservoir host of the disease, and R. opimus and T. indica were absent. We suggest that ZCL may be increasing in the southern region due to the proximity of rodent burrows to people’s houses (about 100 m) and increased agricultural activity and rural development in these areas. These factors facilitate more human contact with the rodent–sandfly–rodent cycle transmission of leishmaniasis.

Acknowledgements

The authors are grateful to the Institute of Public Health Research, Tehran University of Medical Sciences for supporting of this investigation and the staff of the Training and Health Research of Kazerun Centre, for their assistance in the fieldwork.

References

  1. Javadian E et al. Epidemiology of cutaneous leishmaniasis in Iran: B. Khorassan Part V: Report on a focus of zoonotic cutaneous leishmaniasis in Esferayen. Bulletin de la Societe de pathologie exotique et de ses filiales, 1976, 69:140–3.
  2. Nadim A. Cutaneous leishmaniasis in southern Iran. In: Ecologies des leishmaniasis. (Colloques Intermationaux No. 239). Paris, Centre National de la Recherch Scientifique, 1977:215–8.
  3. Control of the leishmaniases. Report of a WHO Expert Committee. Geneva, World Health Organization, 1990 (WHO Technical Report Series No. 793).
  4. Ozbet Y et al. Epidemiology, diagnosis and control of leishmaniasis in the Mediterranean region. Annals of tropical medicine and parasitology, 1995, 89 (suppl. 1):89–93.
  5. Nadim A, Faghih M. The epidemiology of cutaneous leishmaniasis in the Isfahan province of Iran. I. The reservoir. II. The human disease. Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1968, 62:534–42.
  6. Nadim A, Seyedi-Rashti MA, Mesghali A. Epidemiology of cutaneous leishmaniasis in Turkeman Sahara, Iran. Journal of tropical medicine and hygiene, 1968, 71:238–9.
  7. Seyedi-Rashti M, Nadim A. Epidemiology of cutaneous leishmaniasis in Iran. B.Khorassan area part I: the reservoirs. Bulletin de la Societe de pathologie exotique, 1967, 60:510–8.
  8. Seyedi-Rashti MA, Salehzadeh AA. New focus of cutaneous leishmaniasis near Tehran, Iran. Proceedings of the VIIth International Congress of Parasitology, Paris, France, 20–24 August. Bulletin de la Societe Francaise de Parasitologie, 1990, Suppl. 2:1145.
  9. Javadian E et al. Confirmation of Tatera indica (Rodentia:Gerbillidae) as the main reservoir host of zoonotic cutaneous leishmaniasis in the west of Iran. Iranian journal of public health, 1998, 27(1/2):55–60.
  10. Javadian E. Reservoir host of cutaneous leishmaniasis in Iran. In: Abstracts of XIIth International Congress for Tropical Medicine and Malaria, 13 September 1988. Amsterdam, Netherlands, 1988:52.
  11. Seyedi-Rashti MA, Nadim A. Cutaneous leishmaniasis in Baluchistan, Iran. Abstract and poster. In: Volume XI. Abstracts of International Congress for Tropical Medicine and Malaria, 16–22 September. Calgary, Canada, 1984:124.
  12. The leishmaniases. Report of a WHO Expert Committee. Geneva, World Health Organization, 1984 (Technical Report Series, No. 701).
  13. Rassi Y et al. Confirmation of Meriones libycus (Rodentia; Gerbillidae) as the main reservoir host of zoonotic cutaneous leishmaniasis in Arsanjan, Fars province, south of Iran (1999–2000). Iranian journal of public health, 2001, 30:143–44.
  14. Etemad E. [The mammals of Iran. Vol. 1. Rodentia]. Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran, National Society for Protection of Natural Resources and Environment, 1978 [in Farsi].
  15. Noyes HA et al. A nested-PCR-based schizodeme method for identifying Leishmania kinetoplast minicircle classes directly from clinical samples and its application to the study of the epidemiology of Leishmania tropica in Pakistan. Journal of clinical microbiology, 1998, 36:2877–81.
  16. Yaghoobi-Ershadi M R et al. Meriones libycus and Rhombomys opimus (Rodentia: Gerbillidae) are the main reservoir hosts in a new focus of zoonotic cutaneous leishmaniasis in Iran. Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1996, 90:503–4.
  17. Dejeux P. Information on the epidemiology and control of the leishmaniasis, by country or territory. Geneva, World Health Organization, 1991 (WHO/LEISH/91.30).
  18. Ashford RW et al. Cutaneous leishmaniasis in the Libyan Arab Republic: preliminary ecological finding. Annals of tropical medicine and parasitology, 1977, 71:265–71.
  19. 19. Ibrahim EA et al. Meriones libycus (Rodentia:Gerbillidae), a possible reservoir host of zoonotic cutaneous leishmaniasis in Riyadh Province, Saudi Arabia. Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1994, 88(1):39.
  20. 20. Rassi Y et al. Epidemiological studies on zoonotic cutaneous leishmaniasis in Neiriz focus, Fars province, south of Iran (2001–2002). In: Abstracts of the 6th International Meeting on Microbial Epidemiological Markers (IMMEM6). August 27–30, 2003. Les Diableret, Switzerland, 2003.