The current clinical and geographical situation of cutaneous leishmaniasis based on species identification in Turkey.


Journal

Acta tropica
ISSN: 1873-6254
Titre abrégé: Acta Trop
Pays: Netherlands
ID NLM: 0370374

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Feb 2019
Historique:
received: 11 08 2018
revised: 31 10 2018
accepted: 03 11 2018
pubmed: 10 11 2018
medline: 2 3 2019
entrez: 10 11 2018
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Leishmaniases are a group of vector-borne diseases caused by the members of Leishmania genus, and there are three main clinical forms of the infection as visceral, cutaneous, and mucocutaneous. Cutaneous leishmaniasis is a growing public health problem in Turkey due to increasing detection of autochthonous cases caused by L. major and L. donovani in some regions in addition to Syrian imported cases. For this reason, we aimed to evaluate the current epidemiological situation of CL in the view of causative agents and their geographical distribution throughout Turkey. The samples were collected from 356 CL patients admitted to different centers in 18 provinces between January 2013 and December 2016. Direct microscopy, culture (regular and enriched NNN) and molecular techniques (real-time ITS1 PCR and hsp70 PCR/sequencing) were performed. By molecular techniques, 299, 28, 19 and 10 isolates/clinical samples were identified as L. tropica, L. major, L. infantum and L. donovani, respectively. Most of the patients (65.73%) had one lesion usually on their face/head. Dry-nodular type lesions (n = 291) were mainly associated with L. tropica while L. major was mainly found related to wet-ulcerative ones. Leishmaniasis recidivans was also detected in 2.52% among 356 patients. L. tropica was detected as most widespread species causing CL in Turkey. L. infantum and L. major was also found in one third of the provinces. Enriched NNN culture was worked well for isolating the parasite and 346 isolates were successfully grown and stored in liquid nitrogen. The comparison of all diagnostic techniques showed that the parasitological positivity rate could increase if the combination of direct microscopy and real-time ITS1 PCR is used. Besides well-known anthroponotic L. tropica cases, the increasing detection of CL cases caused by zoonotic species, L. infantum and L. major, is one of the most important findings in the present study. In our opinion to ensure timely and accurate diagnosis, proper treatment and countrywide effective control of CL in Turkey a systematic approach is needed on the base of information about characteristics of lesions and patients and epidemiological features of the disease.

Identifiants

pubmed: 30412694
pii: S0001-706X(18)30996-3
doi: 10.1016/j.actatropica.2018.11.001
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

59-67

Informations de copyright

Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Auteurs

Ahmet Özbilgin (A)

Manisa Celal Bayar University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Parasitology, Manisa, Turkey.

Seray Töz (S)

Ege University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Parasitology, İzmir, Turkey.

Mehmet Harman (M)

Dicle University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Dermatology, Diyarbakir, Turkey.

Suhan Günaştı Topal (S)

Çukurova University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Dermatology, Adana, Turkey.

Soner Uzun (S)

Akdeniz University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Dermatology, Antalya, Turkey.

Fulya Okudan (F)

Antalya Atatürk State Hospital, Department of Dermatology, Antalya, Turkey.

Dilek Güngör (D)

Çukurova University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Dermatology, Adana, Turkey.

Ayşegül Erat (A)

Akdeniz University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Dermatology, Antalya, Turkey.

Hatice Ertabaklar (H)

Adnan Menderes University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Parasitology, Aydın, Turkey.

Sema Ertuğ (S)

Adnan Menderes University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Parasitology, Aydın, Turkey.

Cumhur Gündüz (C)

Ege University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Medical Biology, İzmir, Turkey.

İbrahim Çavuş (İ)

Manisa Celal Bayar University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Parasitology, Manisa, Turkey.

Mehmet Karakuş (M)

Ege University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Parasitology, İzmir, Turkey.

İpek Östan Ural (İ)

Celal Bayar University, Vocational School of Health Sciences, Manisa, Turkey.

M Kirami Ölgen (MK)

Ege University, Department of Geography, İzmir, Turkey.

Çağla Kayabaşı (Ç)

Ege University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Medical Biology, İzmir, Turkey.

Özgür Kurt (Ö)

Acıbadem University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Medical Microbiology, Istanbul, Turkey.

Yusuf Özbel (Y)

Ege University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Parasitology, İzmir, Turkey. Electronic address: yusuf.ozbel@ege.edu.tr.

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Classifications MeSH