Schistosomiasis in Mauritius
- 1 November 1953
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
- Vol. 47 (6) , 564-579
- https://doi.org/10.1016/s0035-9203(53)80010-6
Abstract
Schistosomiasis in Mauritius is due to S. haematobium and is wide spread among Indians and Creoles[long dash]probably because of occupational (agricultural) hazards and not because of any racial difference in susceptibility or immunity. Many more males are infected than females; the incidence being highest in school children, adolescents and young adults. The natural snail host was not detd., but Bulinus forskali was shown experimentally to be the only snail capable of so functioning. Epidemiological evidence points toward this snail as being the probable natural vector although field infections with the schistosomes have never been discovered. The use of the cercarial antigen skin test produced such conflicting results in this survey that it was abandoned as misleading, although similar tests in Rhodesia were highly specific.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- A study of the vector-parasite relationships in Schistosoma mansoniParasitology, 1951
- Schistosomiasis in the Kota Kota district of NyasalandTransactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1948
- Observations on the Life-Cycle ofSchistosoma Mansoniin the Laboratory, with a Discussion on the Snail Vectors ofS. MansoniandS. HaematobiumPathogens and Global Health, 1947
- A Helminthological Survey in Northern RhodesiaJournal of Helminthology, 1946
- DIAGNOSIS OF SCHISTOSOMIASIS INTRADERMAL TEST USING A CERCARIAL ANTIGENThe Lancet, 1946
- Studies on Bilharzia in MauritiusPathogens and Global Health, 1935
- Studies on Bilharzia in MauritiusPathogens and Global Health, 1934
- A New Definitive Host for Schistosoma mansoniJournal of Helminthology, 1928
- The Occurrence in Cyprus of Bullinus contortus in the Endemic Area of Schistosoma hæmatobiumJournal of Helminthology, 1928
- Observations on Bilharziasis amongst the Egyptian Expeditionary ForceParasitology, 1920