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      Species of Angiostrongylus (Nematoda: Metastrongyloidea) in wildlife: A review

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          Highlights

          • Twenty-one species of Angiostrongylus are recognised from wildlife around the world.

          • Details of hosts, life cycles, pathogenesis, geographical range are known for nine.

          • Six species are spreading into new regions locally or globally.

          • Two species, A. cantonensis and A. costaricensis, are zoonotic.

          • A. mackerrasae, A. malaysiensis and A. siamensis are potentially zoonotic.

          • Debilitating disease occurs in avian and mammalian wildlife and humans in Australia.

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          Abstract

          Twenty-one species of Angiostrongylus plus Angiostrongylus sp. (Nematoda: Metastrongyloidea) are known currently in wildlife. These occur naturally in rodents, tupaiids, mephitids, mustelids, procyonids, felids, and canids, and aberrantly in a range of avian, marsupial and eutherian hosts including humans. Adults inhabit the pulmonary arteries and right atrium, ventricle and vena cava, bronchioles of the lung or arteries of the caecum and mesentery. All species pass first-stage larvae in the faeces of the host and all utilise slugs and/or aquatic or terrestrial snails as intermediate hosts. Gastropods are infected by ingestion or penetration of first-stage larvae; definitive hosts by ingestion of gastropods or gastropod slime. Transmission of at least one species may involve ingestion of paratenic hosts. Five developmental pathways are identified in these life cycles. Thirteen species, including Angiostrongylus sp., are known primarily from the original descriptions suggesting limited geographic distributions. The remaining species are widespread either globally or regionally, and are continuing to spread. Small experimental doses of infective larvae (ca. 20) given to normal or aberrant hosts are tolerated, although generally eliciting a granulomatous histopathological response; large doses (100–500 larvae) often result in clinical signs and/or death. Two species, A. cantonensis and A. costaricensis, are established zoonoses causing neurological and abdominal angiostrongliasis respectively. The zoonotic potential of A. mackerrasae, A. malaysiensis and A. siamensis particularly warrant investigation. Angiostrongylus cantonensis occurs in domestic animals, mammalian and avian wildlife and humans in the metropolitan areas of Brisbane and Sydney, Australia, where it has been suggested that tawny frogmouths and brushtail possums may serve as biosentinels. A major conservation issue is the devastating role A. cantonensis may play around zoos and fauna parks where captive rearing of endangered species programmes may exist and where Rattus spp. are invariably a problem.

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          Most cited references158

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          Life history and redescription of Angiostrongylus costaricensis Morera and Céspedes, 1971.

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            Neuro-angiostrongyliasis: unresolved issues.

            Angiostrongylus cantonensis, the rat lungworm, probably evolved with its hosts, members of the genus Rattus and closely related species, in south-east Asia. Since its first discovery in rats in China and in a case of human infection in Taiwan, the parasite has been found to infect humans and other mammals across a wide and ever-increasing territory, which now encompasses much of south-east Asia, Melanesia, Polynesia and eastern Australia. It has also established a foothold in Africa, India, the Caribbean and south-eastern USA. This dispersal has been a direct result of human activity, and in some cases has been linked with the spread of the African giant land snail, Achatina fulica. However, this snail is not critical to the extension of the parasite's range, as numerous other indigenous molluscan species serve as adequate intermediate hosts; the importance of Achatina to the life cycle may have been over-emphasized. In Australia, the parasite is established along parts of the east coast, and the presence of an indigenous close relative, Angiostrongylus mackerrasae, suggests a long association of the parasite with its local rat hosts, a situation analogous to that of Angiostrongylus malaysiensis in south-east Asia. These three Angiostrongylus species share virtually the same life cycle, but only A. cantonensis has been confirmed to be a human pathogen.
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              Angiostrongylus vasorum: a real heartbreaker.

              Recent reports suggest that the canine heartworm Angiostrongylus vasorum is expanding from traditional endemic foci in several parts of the world. We are ill placed to judge the causes and potential consequences of this expansion because of a lack of knowledge about fundamental aspects of the biology of the parasite. We call for a renewed focus on this important but neglected nematode.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Int J Parasitol Parasites Wildl
                Int J Parasitol Parasites Wildl
                International Journal for Parasitology: Parasites and Wildlife
                Elsevier
                2213-2244
                09 March 2015
                August 2015
                09 March 2015
                : 4
                : 2
                : 178-189
                Affiliations
                Australian National Wildlife Collection, CSIRO National Research Collections, GPO Box 1700, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia
                Author notes
                [* ]Australian National Wildlife Collection, CSIRO National Research Collections, GPO Box 1700, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia. Tel.: +61 2 62421648; fax: +61 2 6242 1688. dave.spratt@ 123456csiro.au
                Article
                S2213-2244(15)00014-0
                10.1016/j.ijppaw.2015.02.006
                4381133
                25853051
                2838fc52-7555-4321-b42b-c28d1a931244
                Crown Copyright © 2015 Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of Australian Society for Parasitology.

                This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

                History
                : 15 January 2015
                : 16 February 2015
                : 20 February 2015
                Categories
                Invited Review

                angiostrongylus spp,wildlife,life cycles,geographical distribution,pathology,zoonoses

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