Abstract

Toxoplasma gondii can infect all mammalian and avian species and currently infects approximately 1–2 billion of the world's human population. Toxoplasma oocysts shed in cat faeces can contaminate the environment and common infection routes for humans are ingestion of Toxoplasma oocysts directly from the environment or on raw, unwashed vegetables and fruit, or by consumption of viable tissue cysts in raw or undercooked meat.Toxoplasma infection in the immunocompetent is usually asymptomatic but presents as a mild to moderate flu or glandular fever-like illness in 10–20% of cases and is self-limiting. Maternal infection acquired during pregnancy may be transmitted to the unborn child causing congenital abnormality or fetal death. In the immunosuppressed and immunodeficient, either acute infection, or reactivation of parasite in latent tissue cysts associated with previously acquired infection, can result in severe or life-threatening disease.Laboratory diagnosis relies primarily on immunoglobulin G (IgG), IgM and, in some cases, IgA testing to assess infection status. IgG avidity testing may also provide a more accurate estimate of duration of infection in the pregnant mother. Detection of active infection relies most commonly on nucleic acid amplification testing, while enhanced immuno-histo-staining can discriminate between the latent and active forms of the parasite in affected tissues.

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