Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Molecular characterization and epidemiological investigation of Cryptosporidium hominis IkA18G1 and C. hominis monkey genotype IiA17, two unusual subtypes diagnosed in Swedish patients.
- Journal:
- Experimental parasitology
- Year:
- 2018
- Authors:
- Lebbad, Marianne et al.
- Affiliation:
- Department of Microbiology
- Species:
- horse
Plain-English summary
In a recent study in Sweden, researchers found two unusual types of a parasite called Cryptosporidium hominis, which usually infects humans but can also be found in animals. They identified two patients, a father and son, who got infected after visiting a monkey farm in Thailand, as well as two other unrelated cases in Sweden. The study suggests that these infections might have come from contact with animals, although no parasites were found in animal samples. This research highlights the potential for humans to catch these types of infections from animals, even if the exact source isn't clear.
Abstract
Cryptosporidium hominis is considered a strictly human-adapted species, and it is only occasionally diagnosed in animals. However, two variants, C. hominis monkey genotype and C. hominis Ik, were originally described in non-human hosts, monkeys and horses, respectively. During a Swedish national Cryptosporidium study, where all samples were analyzed at the small subunit rRNA and the 60 kDa (gp60) glycoprotein loci, we identified two patients infected with C. hominis monkey genotype (subtype IiA17) and two infected with C. hominis subtype IkA18G1. The isolates were further analyzed at the actin and the 70 kDa heat shock protein loci, and these analyses showed that these two subtype families are closely related to each other and to human-adapted C. hominis as well as to Cryptosporidium cuniculus. The two patients with C. hominis monkey genotype infection (a father and son) had visited a monkey farm in Thailand prior to infection, while the two cases with C. hominis Ik were unrelated, both probably infected in Sweden. This is the first time that a monkey genotype infection in humans has been related to contact with monkeys and where the gp60 subtype was identified. It is also the first time that human infection caused by C. hominis subtype Ik is described. Even though we were not able to detect any parasites in the animal samples, zoonotic transmission cannot be ruled out in any of these cases because both subtype families are regarded as animal adapted.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29518449/