Human and animal invasive muscular sarcocystosis in Malaysia - Recent cases, review and hypotheses

Sarcocystosis, an unusual parasitic zoonotic disease, is caused by coccidian/ apicomplexan protozoa in humans and animals. The parasites usually develop in a heteroxenous predator-prey life-cycle involving final (carnivore) and intermediate (omnivore/herbivore) hosts. Besides the intestinal, non-inv...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Tropical Biomedicine
Main Author: Tappe D.; Abdullah S.; Heo C.C.; Kannan Kutty K.; Latif B.
Format: Review
Language:English
Published: 2013
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84884739144&partnerID=40&md5=77bb1d4755ce1d2783da5ca28ce16d2a
id 2-s2.0-84884739144
spelling 2-s2.0-84884739144
Tappe D.; Abdullah S.; Heo C.C.; Kannan Kutty K.; Latif B.
Human and animal invasive muscular sarcocystosis in Malaysia - Recent cases, review and hypotheses
2013
Tropical Biomedicine
30
3

https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84884739144&partnerID=40&md5=77bb1d4755ce1d2783da5ca28ce16d2a
Sarcocystosis, an unusual parasitic zoonotic disease, is caused by coccidian/ apicomplexan protozoa in humans and animals. The parasites usually develop in a heteroxenous predator-prey life-cycle involving final (carnivore) and intermediate (omnivore/herbivore) hosts. Besides the intestinal, non-invasive form of the disease in which humans and animals are the definitive hosts for certain Sarcocystis spp., the invasive form has come to recent attention. In the latter, humans and animals serve as intermediate host harbouring sarcocysts in their muscle tissue. Already in 1991 sarcocystosis was seen as a potential emerging food-borne zoonosis in Malaysia, and in 2011 and 2012 the largest cluster of symptomatic human muscular sarcocystosis world-wide was reported from Tioman Island, Pahang state. In this review, we focus on invasive sarcocystosis in humans and animals in Malaysia, review the recorded cases and epidemiology, and present hypotheses.

01275720
English
Review

author Tappe D.; Abdullah S.; Heo C.C.; Kannan Kutty K.; Latif B.
spellingShingle Tappe D.; Abdullah S.; Heo C.C.; Kannan Kutty K.; Latif B.
Human and animal invasive muscular sarcocystosis in Malaysia - Recent cases, review and hypotheses
author_facet Tappe D.; Abdullah S.; Heo C.C.; Kannan Kutty K.; Latif B.
author_sort Tappe D.; Abdullah S.; Heo C.C.; Kannan Kutty K.; Latif B.
title Human and animal invasive muscular sarcocystosis in Malaysia - Recent cases, review and hypotheses
title_short Human and animal invasive muscular sarcocystosis in Malaysia - Recent cases, review and hypotheses
title_full Human and animal invasive muscular sarcocystosis in Malaysia - Recent cases, review and hypotheses
title_fullStr Human and animal invasive muscular sarcocystosis in Malaysia - Recent cases, review and hypotheses
title_full_unstemmed Human and animal invasive muscular sarcocystosis in Malaysia - Recent cases, review and hypotheses
title_sort Human and animal invasive muscular sarcocystosis in Malaysia - Recent cases, review and hypotheses
publishDate 2013
container_title Tropical Biomedicine
container_volume 30
container_issue 3
doi_str_mv
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84884739144&partnerID=40&md5=77bb1d4755ce1d2783da5ca28ce16d2a
description Sarcocystosis, an unusual parasitic zoonotic disease, is caused by coccidian/ apicomplexan protozoa in humans and animals. The parasites usually develop in a heteroxenous predator-prey life-cycle involving final (carnivore) and intermediate (omnivore/herbivore) hosts. Besides the intestinal, non-invasive form of the disease in which humans and animals are the definitive hosts for certain Sarcocystis spp., the invasive form has come to recent attention. In the latter, humans and animals serve as intermediate host harbouring sarcocysts in their muscle tissue. Already in 1991 sarcocystosis was seen as a potential emerging food-borne zoonosis in Malaysia, and in 2011 and 2012 the largest cluster of symptomatic human muscular sarcocystosis world-wide was reported from Tioman Island, Pahang state. In this review, we focus on invasive sarcocystosis in humans and animals in Malaysia, review the recorded cases and epidemiology, and present hypotheses.
publisher
issn 01275720
language English
format Review
accesstype
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
_version_ 1814778510477099008