The impact of repeated ivermectin treatments on the transmission of Onchocerca volvulus was evaluated in the Vina valley, northern Cameroon, by comparing the prevalence and intensity of infection observed in untreated 5-7 years old children living in the treated communities before and after 7-8 successive annual rounds of ivermectin treatment of the general population of those communities. The villages studied were Ngoumi and Babidan, where the initial community microfilarial loads (CMFL) were 83.7 and 216.4 microfilariae per skin snip, respectively. In 1995, after 8 annual treatments, the prevalence and intensity in Ngoumi had decreased by more than 90%, compared with the pretreatment values, and the prevalence continued to decrease between 1992 and 1995. In Babidan, after 7 annual treatments, the prevalence and intensity had also decreased significantly, but less than in Ngoumi. The study demonstrated that repeated treatments brought about a notable reduction in the transmission of O. volvulus in the Vina valley, despite unfavourable factors such as mean drug coverages below 60% and the good vectorial competence of Simulium damnosum s.s. and S. sirbanum.
The transmission success of Onchocerca volvulus is thought to be influenced by a variety of regulatory or density-dependent processes that act at various points in the two-host life-cycle. This paper examines one component of the life-cycle, namely, the ingestion of microfilariae by the simuliid vector, to assess the relationship between intake of larvae and the density of parasites in the skin of the human host. Analysis is based on data from three areas in which onchocerciasis is endemic and includes published information as well as new data collected in field studies. The three areas are: Guatemala (Simulium ochraceum s.l.), West and Central Africa (savanna members of the S. damnosum complex), and South Venezuela (S. guianense). The data record experimental studies of parasite uptake by flies captured in the field and fed to repletion on locally infected subjects who harboured varying intensities of dermal microfilarial infection. Regression analyses of log transformed counts of parasite burdens ingested by the flies plotted against log transformed counts of microfilariae per mg of skin revealed little evidence for saturation in parasite uptake by the flies as the intensity in the human host increased. There was a positive and highly significant rank correlation between both variables for the three blackfly species. In an alternative analysis a model was fitted to data on prevalence of flies with ingested microfilariae (mff) versus dermal mean intensities. The model assumed an overdispersed distribution of the number of mff/fly and a given functional relationship between intake and skin load. The results of both approaches were consistent. It is concluded that parasite ingestion by the vector host is not strongly density dependent in the three geographical areas and ranges of dermal loads examined. It therefore appears that this transmission process is of reduced importance as a regulatory mechanism in the dynamics of parasite population growth.
In 26 villages (1987 population 12,302), hyperendemic for savanna onchocerciasis in North Cameroon, ivermectin was distributed annually between 1987/89 and 1995. Each year until 1992, ophthalmologic examinations were performed before treatment. A final examination was made in 1995. The effects of ivermectin on ocular onchocerciasis were assessed by following (a) the ophthalmologic indices in three cohorts of males recruited before treatment in 1987, 1988 and 1989, who were treated and examined annually, and (b) the indices recorded yearly in the cross-section of males aged 15-19 years. The indices in 1995 from patients who had received up to eight doses were compared with those calculated before treatment in individuals of similar age. In the cohorts, the prevalences of microfilariae in the anterior chamber (MFAC) and of punctate keratitis (PK) recorded in 1995 were markedly reduced; there was a non-significant decrease in sclerosing keratitis (SK), and a significant worsening in the fundus indices in the cohorts. The cross-sectional analysis showed significant decreases in the prevalences of MFAC, PK and SK, and a significant increase in the mean visual acuity; there was no significant change in any fundus index. The findings suggest that repeated ivermectin treatment does not prevent the appearance of initial retinal lesions or the worsening of existing retinal lesions.
Adult Onchocerca voluvlus and infective larvae, but not microfilariae contain an immunodominant antigen (33,000 and 21,000 Mr in females, 39,000, 33,000, and 21,000 Mr in males, 133,000 Mr in infective larvae) which is recognized by an Onchocerca-specific mAb. The component is part of the reproductive organs and muscles. 96.2% of onchocerciasis sera contained antibodies detectable by immunoblotting against it. Antigen purified by immunoaffinity chromatography was specifically recognized in immunoblots by onchocerciasis sera, but not by sera from other filarial infections. The high immunogenicity, the specificity, and the occurrence in infective larvae of this antigen indicate an immunodiagnostic potential and a possible role in the immunobiology of the parasite.
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