Abstract
In January and February 2019, a malacological survey was conducted in the area surrounding the residence of a 12-year-old child that had contracted cerebral angiostrongyliasis in the municipality of Macapá, capital of the Amapá State, northern Brazil. The serological examination was positive for Angiostrongylus cantonensis infection, the principal etiological agent of this parasitosis. A sample of 54 molluscs was artificially and individually digested for parasitological analysis, containing 38 specimens of Achatina fulica, nine specimens of Bulimulus tenuissimus and seven specimens of Sarasinula linguaeformis. A. fulica was the most abundant mollusc, and the only species infected with A. cantonensis, as well as presenting co-infections with other nematodes. This is the first report of cerebral angiostrongyliasis in the Amazon Region, and the first record of A. fulica infected with A. cantonensis in Amapá. These findings highlight the potential risks of human angiostrongyliasis, and the need to implement public health measures to control the spread of the disease.
Highlights
Angiostrongyliasis includes parasitic infections caused by metastrongylid nematodes of the genus Angiostrongylus Kamensky, 1905
The present study provides the first report of a case of cerebral angiostrongyliasis in the Brazilian Amazon Region, in the municipality of Macapá, capital of the Amapá State
The study presents the first record of A. cantonensis larvae infecting the giant African snail, A. fulica, in Amapá
Summary
Angiostrongyliasis includes parasitic infections caused by metastrongylid nematodes of the genus Angiostrongylus Kamensky, 1905. The study presents the first record of A. cantonensis larvae infecting the giant African snail, A. fulica, in Amapá.
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