ENDEMICITY OF TOXOPLASMOSIS IN COSTA RICA

Abstract
Frenkel, J. K. (U. of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, KS 66103) and A. Ruiz. Endemicity of toxoplasmosis in Costa Rica: transmission between cats, soil, Intermediate hosts and humans. Am J Epidemiol 1981; 113: 254-69. Toxoplasma infection can be transmitted to humans either by Ingestion of tissue cysts in meat or by ingestlon of oocysts in cat feces or fecally contaminated soll. Since meat is traditionally well cooked in Costa Rica and the authors were able to exclude meat and eggs from playing a role in transmission, they postulated that ingestion of oocysts should entirely explain transmission. To test this hypothesis, they studied seven populations in Costa Rica and serologically tested 883 people between 15 and 26 years of age. By interviews and surveys, they determined mode of living, soil contact, cat contact, and cat density. The infection rate in cats was studied by stool and serologic examination, and soll availability for defecation was determined from aerial photographs. Antibody was taken as indicating infection and was found to be acquired most actively in children and young cats. In a retrospective analysis, antibody prevalence in humans correlated highly with individual cat contact (both owned and stray), with cat density, with living in houses with wood floors and a crawl space underneath, and with living with cats on a cement floor. Antibody prevalence in humans correlated negatively with soil availability to cats for defecation and with soil contact by humans, suggesting that oocysts may be transmitted optimally near houses In areas where most terrain is covered by asphalt and concrete and little soil is available for defecation or for human soll contact. Cats acquire Infection by eating Intermediate hosts; 16% of sparrows, 3.5% of mice and 12.5% of rats have been found Infected. Favoring transmission are young and non-Immune cat populations, shade and moisture, older Intermediate hosts, a high percentage of which have become infected, and concentration of houses in city blocks. Transmission is diminished when houses are dispersed or arranged along a road in an open rural setting, permitting dispersal of cat fecal deposits.

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