Abstract
The present paper summarizes prevalence, epidemiology and clinical disease of natural Toxoplasma gondii infections in humans and animals from Egypt. The current situation of toxoplasmosis in Egypt is confusing. There is no central laboratory or group of researchers actively investigating toxoplasmosis in humans or animals, and no reports on the national level are available. Based on various serological tests and convenience samples, T. gondii infections appear highly prevalent in humans and animals from Egypt. Living circumstances in Egypt favour the transmission of T. gondii. Up to 95% of domestic cats, the key host of T. gondii, are infected with T. gondii; they are abundant in rural and suburban areas, spreading T. gondii oocysts. Many women have been tested in maternity clinics, most with no definitive diagnosis. Toxoplasma gondii DNA and IgM antibodies have been found in blood samples of blood donors. Clinical toxoplasmosis in humans from Egypt needs further investigations using definitive procedures. Reports on congenital toxoplasmosis are conflicting and some reports are alarming. Although there are many serological surveys for T. gondii in animals, data on clinical infections are lacking. Here, we critically review the status of toxoplasmosis in Egypt, which should be useful to biologist, public health workers, veterinarians and physicians.
Key words: Animals, Egypt, epidemiology, humans, prevalence, Toxoplasma gondii, toxoplasmosis
Introduction
Toxoplasmosis is a worldwide zoonosis caused by the protozoan Toxoplasma gondii, which was first discovered in 1908 in the rodent Ctenodactylus gundi at the Pasteur Institute in Tunisia (Nicolle and Manceaux, 1908). At the same time, the parasite was noted in the domestic rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus) from Brazil (Splendore, 1908). Cats (domestic and wild) are the only definitive hosts of T. gondii and are essential in its epidemiology because they are the only hosts that can shed environmentally resistant oocysts (Dubey, 2010).
Approximately one-third of humanity is infected with T. gondii worldwide although this varies markedly between populations (Dubey, 2010; Robert-Gangneux and Dardè, 2012). Most infections appear to be asymptomatic in immunocompetent persons; however, the parasite can cause serious disease in unborn fetus and immunocompromised individuals (Peyron et al., 2016). In many animal host species, the infection is also typically subclinical; however, toxoplasmosis can be fatal in many hosts (Dubey, 2010).
Here, we review the detailed prevalence, epidemiological aspects and clinical disease of natural T. gondii infection in humans and animals, with focus on domestic animals, from Egypt.
Methods for present review
Egypt is a large African country and has a human population >100 million. It is divided into 27 governorates (Fig. 1). The largest city in Egypt is Cairo, the capital, with a population of >8 million people. Nearly 57% of people live in rural areas, whereas 43% live in urbanized cities (World Population Review, 2019). The Egyptian economy is variable and depends largely on agriculture.
A systematic electronic search of published data was conducted from November 2018 to May 2019. Different databases were consulted including PubMed, Science Direct and Google Scholar using the following keywords: Toxoplasma gondii, toxoplasmosis, Egypt, human and animals. Websites of the local Egyptian journals were also incorporated in our search. Libraries of different Egyptian medical and veterinary faculties and institutes were consulted for the old published papers, which are not available as electronic files. Full texts of some earlier published papers were available in the collection of one of us (JPD).
We found numerous reports (>250) on toxoplasmosis in humans and animals from Egypt. Criteria for inclusion were the full text of papers, abstracts only were excluded. After filtering the collected studies, 170 articles met the criteria to be selected for this review. No statistical methods were employed in this study. In the present review, we attempted to incorporate all published reports available to us on natural T. gondii infections in Egypt. Some reports of toxoplasmosis in Egypt were included in two reviews on T. gondii infections in Africa (Tonouhewa et al., 2017; Rouatbi et al., 2019). The present review is limited to Egypt.
In the present review, detailed serological, parasitological and clinical information on T. gondii infections in humans and animals is summarized in the tables and throughout the text. Different serological techniques used in the Egyptian studies are listed in Table 1. Cut-off values for serological tests are listed wherever the authors provided the information. Superscripts in the tables refer to the details of the serological tests provided in Table 1.
Table 1.
Test abbreviation | Antigen | Cut-off | Manufacturer | Citation in the present review |
---|---|---|---|---|
Skin test | Soluble | – | In house | Tb2,15,16 |
Sabin–Feldman dye test DT | Live tachyzoites | Differs | In house | Tb2,3,6,8,11,13,14,15,16,18,19,20,21 |
Complement fixation test CFT | Soluble | – | NS | Tb 11,19 |
OnSite Toxo IgG rapid test OTRT | Recombinant | NS | CTK Biotech, CA, USA www.ctkbiotech.com | Tb2,11,13 |
Slide agglutination test SAT | NS | 1:16 | In house | Tb11 |
Enzyme linked fluorescence assay ELFA VIDAS Toxo IgG II kit | Membrane and cytoplasmic Toxoplasma antigen (RH strain) | ⩾8 IU ml−1 | Biomērieux, Craponne, France www.biomerieux.com | Tb3 |
Modified agglutination test | ||||
MAT | Formalin-treated whole tachyzoites | Differs | In house | Tb3,11,12,13,14,16,17,18,19 |
Toxoscreen Direct agglutination DAT | Formalin-treated whole tachyzoites | 1:40 | Biomērieux, Craponne, France www.biomerieux.com | Tb11,12 |
Latex agglutination test LAT | ||||
1. Toxocheck-MT | Soluble | 1:64 | Eiken Chemical, Tokyo, Japan www.eiken.co.jp | Tb8,11,13,15,17,20,21 |
2. Toxo Latex kit | Soluble | 1:2 | CamTech medical, UK | Tb11,13,14,15,16 |
3. LAT | Soluble local antigen | NS | In house | Tb11,13,17 |
4. LAT | Soluble | 1:64 | Sigma Scientific Service Co., Cairo, Egypt www.sigmaeg-co.com | Tb3,12 |
5. Toxo-LAT fumouze kits | Soluble | NS | Fumouze Diagnostics, France www.fumouze.com | Tb3 |
Indirect haemagglutination test IHA | ||||
1. Toxo-HAI Fumouze kits | Soluble | 1:80 | Fumouze Diagnostics, France www.fumouze.com | Tb2,3,4,7,11,12,13,15,17,18,19 |
2. Toxo-HA | Soluble | 1:64 | Biomērieux, Craponne, France www.biomerieux.com | Tb2,8 |
3. Toxo-IHA-Fast Kit | Soluble | 1:80 | ABC Diagnostics, New Damietta, Egypt | Tb13,14 |
4. IHA | Soluble | 1:16 | In house | Tb11,18 |
5. IHA | Soluble | 1:64 | Behringwerke AG, Marburg, Germany (merged into CSL Behring) www.cslbehring.com | Tb2,3,6,11,13,14,15,16,19,20 |
Indirect fluorescent antibody test IFA | ||||
1. IFA | Lyophilized tachyzoites (Biomērieux) | 1:16 | In house | Tb3,4,6,8 |
2. Toxo-spot IF slides | Formalin-treated whole tachyzoites | 1:50 | Biomērieux, Craponne, France www.biomerieux.com | Tb2,11,13 |
3. IFA | Formalin-treated whole tachyzoites | 1:16 | In house | Tb2,18 |
4. IFA | Whole tachyzoites | 1:64 | In house | Tb11,17 |
5. IFA | NS | 1:16 | In house | Tb2,3,6,11,13,14,15,16,18 |
Enzyme linked immunosorbant assay ELISA | ||||
1. bioelisaToxo IgG kits | Inactivated | >10 IU ml−1 | Biokit, Barcelona, Spain www.biokit.com | Tb3,4 |
2. Toxoplasma IgG ELISA | Whole tachyzoites | ⩾1.2 | Calbiotek, CA, USA www.calbiotech.com | Tb3,4,11,13,14,15,16 |
3. ClinotechToxo ELISA IgG Kits | NS | NS | Clinotech Diagnostics and Pharmaceuticals, Richmond, Canada | Tb2,3,4 |
4. SeraQuest Toxoplasma IgG | NS | NS | Quest International, Inc., Florida, USA | Tb4 |
5. ELISA IgG Kits | NS | ⩾1 | Pre Check, Inc., Housten, USA www.precheck.com | Tb3,4 |
6. Toxoplasma IgG ELISA Kits | NS | ⩾1.5 | MyBioSource, CA, USA www.mybiosource.com | Tb3 |
7. Toxo IgG ELISA Test Kit | Inactivated | 8 IU ml−1 | Diagnostic Automation/Cortez Diagnostics, Inc., CA, USA www.rapidtest.com | Tb3 |
8. Toxoplasma IgG ELISA kit | NS | >1 | BioCheck, Inc., CA, USA www.biocheckinc.com | Tb4,6,7,14 |
9. Toxoplasma IgG ELISA Kit | NS | 0.185 | MP Biomedicals Diagnostics Division, Orangeberg, NY, USA | Tb4 |
10. Toxo IgG ELISA kit | Sonicated antigen | >0.343 | Human Gesellschaft für Biochemica und Diagnostica mbH, Wiesbaden, Germany | Tb2 |
11. DRG® Toxoplasma gondii IgG Kit | Inactivated | NS | DRG internationals, Inc., USA www.drg-international.com | Tb2,7 |
12. ID screen toxoplasmosis multispecies indirect ELISA | P30 antigen | NS | ID.Vet, Grabels, France www.id-vet.com | Tb11,13 |
13. ELISA | Toxoplasma total lysate antigen | 0.395 | In house | Tb11,13 |
14. ELISA | Recombinant GST-TgSAG2t antigen | Differs | In house | Tb3,11,15,19 |
15. Indirect ELISA | Recombinant TgGRA7 antigen | NS | In house | Tb3,11,15,17 |
16. ELISA | Soluble whole tachyzoites | NS | In house | Tb3,11,13,15,16,17,18,19 |
17. ELISA | Soluble crude antigen | NS | In house | Tb11,13,14,15,16,17,19,21 |
18. Indirect IgM ELISA | NS | NS | Serion, Würzburg, Germany www.serion-diagnostics.de | Tb3 |
19. ELISA-IgG | NS | ⩾1 | Randox, London, UK www.randox.com | Tb3,4 |
20. ELISA | NS | NS | Pishtaz Teb Diagnostics, Tehran, Iran. www.old.pishtazteb.com | Tb4 |
21. ELISA | NS | NS | Behringwerke AG, Marburg, Germany (merged into CSL Behring) www.cslbehring.com | Tb4 |
22. ELISA | NS | ⩾1 | Chemux Bioscience, Inc., CA, USA www.chemux.com | Tb4,7 |
23. ETI-TOXO PLUS | NS | NS | DiaSorin, Salugga, Italy www.diasorin.com | Tb2 |
24. Novalisa ELISA Kits | NS | NS | Nove Tec immunodiagnostica GmbH, Dietzenbach, Germany www.novatec-id.com | Tb3 |
25. ELISA | NS | 10 IU ml−1 | IMMUNOSPEC, California, USA www.immunospec.com | Tb5 |
Tb, table.
History of toxoplasmosis in Egypt
Rifaat and Nagaty (1959) first reported dermal hypersensitivity to T. gondii in 15.6% of 334 hospital patients and technical personnel from Cairo using the T. gondii skin test. The skin test was one of the first tests developed by Frenkel (1948) for a population survey for T. gondii in California, USA; it is a very insensitive test and does not detect acute infection. Subsequently, a highly sensitive and specific test, the dye test (DT), was invented by Sabin and Feldman for the detection of antibodies to T. gondii. Beginning in 1962, Rifaat et al. used the DT to conduct serological surveys for antibodies to T. gondii in humans and other hosts in Egypt. The DT requires the use of live T. gondii and is used now only in few laboratories in the world. Rifaat et al. (1973e) also reported the first case of congenital toxoplasmosis, and they were the first to isolate viable T. gondii in Egypt (Rifaat et al., 1971, 1973a, 1973c, 1976b, 1976c). Currently, there is no central laboratory or group of researchers actively investigating toxoplasmosis in humans or animals, and unfortunately, no studies are available on the awareness of physicians in Egypt about toxoplasmosis.
Toxoplasmosis in humans
Serological prevalence in general population
In Egypt, there are no centralized data on the national prevalence of T. gondii. Most serological reports are based on convenience samples, including in pregnant women, and patients with disorders (Tables 2–5). Generally, little is known of T. gondii infection from Sinai and Red Sea governorates, although habits of people living there promote T. gondii transmission. Most people living there are Bedouins working mainly in livestock rearing. They usually eat undercooked mutton and drink raw goat and camel milk, in addition to the critical deficiency in hygienic measures and health services. Isolated serological reports in the general population and occupational groups are summarized in Table 2.
Table 2.
Population | Governorate | No. tested | No. positive (%) | Test | Important findings | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hospital patients and technical personnel | Cairo | 334 | 54 (15.6) | Skin test | High prevalence (21%) in older age >20 yrs than in younger 10–19 yrs (6.6%). No positives in children <9 yrs. 15/60 (25%) schizophrenic patients were positive | Rifaat and Nagaty (1959) |
Students 10–14 yrs | Tahrir provincea | 87 | 12 (13.8) | Skin test | – | Rifaat et al. (1962) |
Students >12 yrs | El Wady El Gadeed | 356 | 9 (2.5) | Skin test | – | Rifaat et al. (1963) |
Different sources | Cairo | 505 | 156 (30.9) | IFA5 | High prevalence in 80 emigrants (37.5%) than 110 abattoir workers (30.9%) and 315 hospital attendants (24.4%). 19 had high Ab titres (1:256–1:1024), 147 had low titres (⩽1:64) | Maronpot and Botros (1972) |
Healthy and hospital attendants of different ages (2–75 yrs) and sexes | Different governorates | 823 | 115 (14.0) | Skin test | Compatibility of the examined population using both tests was not given | Rifaat et al. (1975) |
1750 | 293 (16.8) | DT (1:16) | ||||
Different sources | Dakahlia | 86 | 24 (27.9) | IHA2 | High prevalence in 21 butchers (38%), 29 poultry breeders (24%), 21 nurses (28.6%), 15 laboratory workers (20%) | Aboul-Enein et al. (1983) |
Occupational workers | Sharkia | 130 | 15 (19.2) | IHA5 | 9 had high Ab titres (1:256–1:512), high rates in abattoir workers and butchers | El-Ridi et al. (1990) |
Lactating women | Kalubiya | 70 | 22(31.4) | IFA2 | Antibodies in milk of 12 (17.1%) | Azab et al. (1992) |
Abattoir workers | Gharbia | 21 | 11 (52.3) | IHA5 | 7 had 1:64 Ab titre, 3 had 1:256 and 1 had 1:512 | Ibrahim et al. (1997) |
Hospital patients | Benha | 500 | 56 (11.2) | IFA | Random samples | Hamadto et al. (1997) |
NS | Kalubiya | 152 | 88 (57.9) | ELISA | 16 (10.5%) had IgM | Hussein et al. (2001) |
Blood donors | Dakahlia | 260 | 155 (59.6) | ELISA10 | Risk assessment | Elsheikha et al. (2009) |
Housewives | Middle Delta | 70 | 13 (43.3) | ELISA-IgG23 | 8 (26.6%) had IgM. Of them, 1/23 in housewives wearing gloves during meat handling and 7/47 in non-glove-users | El-Tras and Tayel (2009) |
Healthy people | Sharkia | 50 | 12 (24.0) | IHA1 | 2 (4%) had IgM | Awadallah (2010) |
Blood donors | Dakahlia | 230 | 155 (67.4) | ELISA | 24 (10.4%) positive for IgG avidity | Azab et al. (2012) |
Blood donors | Kalubiya | 300 | 101 (33.5) | ELISA11 | 93 had IgG, 10 had IgM (2 IgM, 8 IgG and IgM), 18 (6%) positive by PCR | El-Sayed et al. (2016a) |
Blood donors | Alexandria | 150 | 98 (65.3) | ELISA8 | 15 (10%) positive by PCR (9 ELISA positive and 6 ELISA negative) | El-Geddawi et al. (2018) |
Occupational workers | Cairo | 127 | 48 (37.8) | IFA3 | Workers from pig farms. 15 had high Ab titres (1:512–1:1024) | Barakat et al. (2011) |
Humans in contact with chickens | Beni-Suef | 250 | 88 (35.2) | IHA1 | – | Aboelhadid et al. (2013) |
Occupational workers | NS | 127 | 48 (37.8) | ELISA3 | 17/48 (35.4%) were PCR positive | Hassanain et al. (2013) |
School children 6–16 yr | El Wady El Gadeed | 1615 | 13 (2.9) | OTRT | – | Bayoumy et al. (2016) |
yrs, year; Ab, antibody.
Now known as Beheira governorate.
Table 5.
Population | Age range | Governorate | No. tested | No. positive (%) | Test | IgM | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Meningoencephalitis | NS | Cairo | 42a | 10 (26.0) | IFA | ND | Mabrouk and Dahawi (1991) |
Cryptogenic epilepsy | 2–46 yr | Zagazig | 72 | 25 (34.7) | ELISA-IgG11 | ND | Abd El-Aal et al. (2016) |
Non-cryptogenic epilepsy | 40 | 1 (2.5) | |||||
Depression | 118 | 24 (20.3) | |||||
Cryptogenic epilepsy | 9 mo-18 yr | Kalubiya | 40 | 8 (20.0) | ELISA-IgG11 | ND | Eraky et al. (2016) |
Non-cryptogenic epilepsy | 30 | None | |||||
Schizophrenia | 20–60 yr | Damietta | 100 | 47 (47.0) | ELISA-IgG22 | ND | Saad et al. (2016) |
Non-schizophrenic neurodevelopmental disorders | < or >20 yr | Alexandria | 188 | 94 (50.0) | ELISA-IgG8 | 31 (16.5) | Shehata et al. (2016) |
Neurological disorders without chromosomal anomalies | ⩽5 yr | Dakahlia | 30 | 19 (63.3) | ELISA-IgG8 | 11 (36.7) | El-Beshbishi et al. (2018) |
Down syndrome | 30 | 4 (13.3) | 1 (3.3) | ||||
Mental retardation | 2 mo-12 yr | Cairo | 200 | 84 (42.0) | IHA1 | ND | Hamed et al. (2018) |
Chronic liver disease | 50–60 yr | Dakahlia | 120 | 105 (87.5) | ELISA-IgG25 | 16 (13.3) | El-Nahas et al. (2014) |
Controls | 40 | 6 (15.0) | 3 (7.5) | ||||
Chronic liver disease | 19–66 yr | Cairo | 70 | 21 (30.0) | PCR-blood | ND | El-Sayed et al. (2016b) |
Controls | 50 | 3 (6.0) | |||||
Tonsilitis | 4–20 yr | Zagazig | 100 | 55 (55.0) | IFAT | ND | El-Ridi et al. (1989) |
Controls | 50 | 12 (24.0) |
ND, not done; NS, not stated; mo, month; yr, year.
Pathogenic bacteria were excluded.
Notable among these early surveys is the 16.3% prevalence determined by the DT (Rifaat et al., 1975). Higher seroprevalence is reported in emigrants (37.5%) and abattoir workers (30.9%) compared with 24.4% in hospital attendants (Maronpot and Botros, 1972). More recently, a very high (33–67%) seroprevalence was reported among blood donors (Table 2). Additionally, T. gondii DNA was found in 10% (15/150) of blood donors from Alexandria (El-Geddawi et al., 2018); of them, nine were IgG seropositive and six were seronegative (no IgM testing was done). Toxoplasma gondii DNA was also noted in 6% (18/300) of blood donors from Kalubiya governorate. Of them, eight were IgM seropositive (El-Sayed et al., 2016a). Authors proposed the acute infection and probability of T. gondii transmission during blood transfusion. This is a very high rate of T. gondii DNA in the blood of asymptomatic individuals. Caution is needed that the accuracy of PCR assay could affect the results. In addition, no further testing was conducted for the positive cases.
Little is known of T. gondii prevalence in children in Egypt. Rifaat et al. (1963) tested 356 school children from El Wady El Gadeed governorate using the skin test. Samples were collected from children ⩾12 years. Nine (2.5%) children were positive. In a recent report, T. gondii antibodies were found in 13 (2.9%) of 6–16 years old 1615 school children (Bayoumy et al., 2016). In these two studies, there is no distinction between acquired infection in childhood and congenital infection.
Data on convenience samples in pregnant women from Egypt attending private health clinics are shown in Table 3. Screening sera for toxoplasmosis is routinely done for pregnant women in Egypt. Unfortunately, this screening is conducted mostly in private diagnostic laboratories, which have no systems for archiving the results. In addition, results of this screening are not conclusive because it is based upon the commercially available tests without efficiency verification. Many published reports on toxoplasmosis in pregnant women from Egypt are of limited sample size and have insufficient information on the studied populations. Results are not comparable among different reports because of sample size, diagnostic test used and living conditions of the women tested. There are few data on seroconversion during pregnancy and before pregnancy.
Table 3.
Governorate | No. tested | No. positive (%) | Test | Additional tests | Remarks | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Assiut | 97 | 26 (26.8) | DT (1:4) | None | OGHA. High Ab titres in 1 (4.8%) of 21 young women (15–20 yrs old) | Rifaat et al. (1972) |
Cairo | 200 | 32 (16.0) | IFA5 | ELISA | OGHA. 22 of 23 IFA positives were ELISA positive | Azab et al. (1983) |
Sharkia | 34 | 4 (11.8) | IFA1 | None | – | El-Ridi et al. (1991b) |
Cairo | 600 | 164 (27.3) | IHA | IFA | Out of IHA positives, 58.5% were IFA positive | Azab et al. (1993) |
Kalubiya | 150 | 64 (43.0) | IHA5 | IgM | 3 (2%) had IgM. 64 (43%) of their neonates had IgG, 1 (0.6%) had IgM. MFTR 33.3% | El-Nawawy et al. (1996) |
Dakahlia | 20 | 2 (10.0) | ELISA-IgG19 | IgM | No IgM positives | Soliman et al. (2001) |
Suez | 358a | 24 (6.7%) | ELISA-IgG | IgM, Mice bioassay, PCR | 46 (12.9%) had IgM. 39 were serconverted. Viable T. gondii was isolated from AF 0f 14 out 85 (46+39) positive women by mice bioassay. 17/85 had T. gondii DNA in AF samples. | Eida et al. (2009) |
Kalubiya | 181a | 85 (47.0) | LAT5 | IgM | Of positives, 63 (34.8%) had IgM | El-Gozamy et al. (2009)b |
Dakahlia | 101 | 51 (51.4) | ELISA14 (0.039) | None | – | Ibrahim et al. (2009) |
Sharkia | 25 | 4 (16.0) | IHA1 | IgM | 2 (8%) had IgM | Awadallah (2010) |
Fayoum | 59 | 27 (45.8) | ELISA-IgG3 | IgM, PCR | Normal pregnant with bad obstetric history. 18 (30.5%) had IgM, 32.2% were PCR positive | Ghoneim et al. (2010) |
Sharkia | 100 | 30 (30.0) | IHA-IgG1 | IgM | 10 (10%) had IgM | Abd El-Ghany and Amin (2012)b |
Menoufiya | 323 | 218 (67.5) | ELFA-IgG | IgM, IgG-avidity, PCR | No seroconversion during pregnancy had occurred. 9 (2.8%) had IgM, of them 1 had low IgG avidity. Viable T. gondii was isolated from this case by mouse bioassay. | El Deeb et al. (2012)b |
Kalubiya | 60 | 29 (48.3) | LAT4 | PCR | 12 (40%) of seropositives were PCR positive. | Khater et al. (2013) |
Sharkia | 100 | 71 (71.0) | IHA-IgG1 | IgM | 19 (19%) had IgM | Ahmed et al. (2014)b |
Dakahlia | 103 | 44 (42.7) | ELISA-IgG2 | IgM | 3 (2.9%) had IgM | El-Tantawy et al. (2014) |
Minia | 120 | 8 (6.6) | ELISA-IgG2 | IgM | 2 (1.6%) had IgM | Kamal et al. (2015) |
Alexandria | 382 | 221 (57.9) | ELISA-IgG5 | None | – | Bassiony et al. (2016)b |
Beni Suef | 300 | 46 (15.3) | ELISA-IgG24 | IgM | Multiparous pregnant women with a history of complication. 26 (8.6%) had IgM | Abdel Gawad et al. (2017)b |
Cairo | 30 | 5 (16.6) | ELISA-IgM1 | Western-blot-IgM, PCR | History of abnormal pregnancy. 9 (30%) were immunoblot positive, 6 (20%) were PCR positive | Abo Hashim and Attya (2017) |
Cairo, Kalubiya, Sharkia | 57 | 22 (38.6) | ELISA-IgG6 | IgM | 4 (7%) had IgM | Abou Elez et al. (2017)b |
Alexandria | 101 | 13 (12.8) | ELFA-IgG | None | – | El-Shqanqery et al. (2017)b |
Beheira | 34 | 10 (29.4) | ||||
Gharbiya | 78 | 21 (26.9) | ||||
Menoufiya | 376 | 124 (32.9) | ||||
Kalubiya | 78 | 21 (26.9) | ||||
Fayoum | 26 | 20 (76.9) | ||||
Total | 693 | 209 (30.1) | ||||
Kafr ElSheikh | 113 | 5 (4.4) | ELISA-IgM18 | None | – | Elmonir et al. (2017)b |
Menoufiya, Gharbiya | 364 | 123 (33.7) | ELISA14 (0.039) | RT-PCR | 11.8% were PCR positive | Ibrahim et al. (2017)b |
Sohag | 350 | 167 (47.7) | ELISA-IgG7 | IgM | 25 (7.1%) had IgM. 138 (39.4%) of their neonates had IgG, while 5 (1.4%) had IgM. MFTR 25% | Hussein et al. (2017) |
Giza | 388 | 79 (20.4) | ELISA-IgG16 | IgM, IgG avidity | 43 (11.8%) had IgM, of them 28 (7.2%) had low avidity | Hassanain et al. (2018b)b |
MFTR, maternal fetal transmission rate; OGHA, obstetrics and gynaecology hospitals attendants; Ab, antibody; yrs, years.
Including some lymphadenopathy, fever and malaise cases, but the authors did not specify numbers of different cases.
Risk assessment, see Table 6.
Risk factors associated with T. gondii infection
Generally, risk factors of T. gondii infection in humans were discussed by many authors (Table 6). Infections were associated with factors such as contact with cats, contact with soil, residence (rural or urban), socioeconomic standards, educational level, ingestion of ready to eat meat products, consumption of undercooked mutton, consumption of raw vegetables, drinking raw milk and consumption of locally prepared Kareish cheese (Elsheikha et al., 2009; El Deeb et al., 2012; Nassef et al., 2015; Hussein et al., 2017). Reports from occupational workers (Table 2) particularly butchers illustrated high T. gondii seroprevalence (Abou-Elenin et al., 1983; El-Ridi et al., 1990; Ibrahim et al., 1997). In addition, T. gondii antibodies were found in the sera of 48 (37.7%) of 127 workers in pig farms from Cairo and Kalubiya where pigs were raised completely on garbage feeding. Of them, 15 had high (1:512–1:1024) antibody titres (Barakat et al., 2011). Toxoplasma gondii DNA was found in 17 (35.4%) out of 48 seropositive occupational workers; however, the authors did not specify their professions (Hassanain et al., 2013). It seems that they tested the same sera used in Barakat et al. (2011).
Table 6.
Population | No. tested | No. positive (%) | Risk factors | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
Complication | 100 | 17 (17.0) | Rural areas and previous abortion | Shatat et al. (2006) |
Complication | 75 | 58 (77.3) | 20–25 years old, urban areas, previous abortion and contact with soil | Abo El Naga et al. (2008) |
Normal pregnant | 181 | 85 (47.0) | 36–40 years old, rural areas and various disorders | El-Gozamy et al. (2009) |
Blood donors | 260 | 155 (59.6) | 30 years old or more, rural areas, bad hand hygiene, consumption of meat byproducts and unwashed vegetables, drinking municipal water, no education, and contact with cats, different animals and soil | Elsheikha et al. (2009) |
Abortion | 100 | 30 (30.0) | Contact with soil and consumption of meat byproducts | Abd El-Ghany and Amin (2012) |
Normal pregnant | 323 | 218 (67.5) | 30–39 years old, urban areas, low economic status, no knowledge about transmission modes, drinking raw milk, consumption of undercooked meat and unwashed vegetables, and contact with cats, farm animals and soil | El Deeb et al. (2012) |
Abortion | 76 | 35 (46.1) | <25 years old, rural areas and multigravida | Tammam et al. (2013) |
Normal pregnant | 100 | 71 (71.0) | 31–35 years old, previous abortion, contact with cats and soil, and consumption of raw milk and homemade cheese | Ahmed et al. (2014) |
Complication | 120 | 46 (38.3) | 26–30 years old, rural area, low socioeconomic level, housewives, contact with soil, and consumption of undercooked meat and raw vegetables | Kamal et al. (2015) |
Abortion | 92 | 48 (52.2) | 31–40 years old, rural areas, contact with cats and soil, and consumption of undercooked meat | Nassef et al. (2015) |
Normal pregnant | 382 | 221 (57.9) | 35–44 years old, contact with cats and multigravida | Bassiony et al. (2016) |
Normal pregnant | 300 | 46 (15.3) | 30–40 years old, rural areas, 3rd pregnancy trimester and workers | Abdel Gawad et al. (2017) |
Normal pregnant | 57 | 22 (38.6) | >30 years old and no knowledge about transmission modes | Abou Elez et al. (2017) |
Normal pregnant | 113 | 5 (4.4) | 17–25 years old, contact with soil and drinking unhygienic water | Elmonir et al. (2017) |
Normal pregnant | 693 | 209 (30.1) | Previous abortion, contact with cats and soil, and consumption of undercooked meat | El-Shqanqery et al. (2017) |
Normal pregnant | 350 | 165 (47.1) | 20–30 years old, living in rural areas, unhealthy houses, low socioeconomic level, contact with cats, handling raw meat and consumption of raw milk | Hussein et al. (2017) |
Normal pregnant | 364 | 123 (33.7) | >25 years old, contact with cats, farm animals and soil, and consumption of undercooked mutton | Ibrahim et al. (2017) |
Complication | 182 | 97 (53.2) | >30 years old, rural areas, contact with soil, consumption of undercooked meat or viscera and raw milk, and bad hand hygiene | Mandour et al. (2017) |
Normal pregnant | 388 | 79 (20.4) | 35–39 years old, rural areas, contact with cats and farm animals, previous abortion, taking immunosuppressive drugs and consumption of raw vegetables | Hassanain et al. (2018a) |
Data linking association between T. gondii infection and several disorders such as chronic liver disease and other conditions were too few for a cause–effect relationship (Table 5).
Clinical toxoplasmosis
Congenital
The first report of a congenital toxoplasmosis-like illness in Egypt was in a 1.5-year-old child from Giza (Rifaat et al., 1973e). He was admitted to the hospital presenting with marasmus and a mass in the upper part of the abdomen of 1 year's duration. The abdominal examination revealed enlarged liver without ascites or lymph node enlargement. Skull radiography showed microcephaly and bilateral 1–3 mm wide calcification. An extensive central chorio-retinal lesion was also found. The child had a DT T. gondii antibody titre of 1:512. His parents were also seropositive (1:128 and 1:64). Despite anti-Toxoplasma treatment (not specified), the child died 3 weeks later; post-mortem examination was not performed. In another report, Rifaat et al. (1973a) first isolated viable T. gondii from human placenta. A 30-year-old woman aborted an edematous macerated 22 weeks gestational age fetus. The fetus also had hydrocephaly. Viable T. gondii was isolated from the placenta (by mouse inoculation) but not from the fetal brain. Thus, there is no definitive evidence of congenital toxoplasmosis in either of these reports.
Other reports on congenital toxoplasmosis in Egypt are very conflicting and mainly published in local journals which are not widely accessible (Table 4). Most of these reports are based on serological results on single samples from pregnant women. The serologic diagnosis of acute maternal infection based on single serum sample is difficult because IgM antibodies can persist for months and the avidity index might remain low for several months (Peyron et al., 2016), thus definitive diagnosis requires the sequential appearance of specific IgM and IgG antibodies in the same sample. Detection of T. gondii in amniotic fluid can confirm the diagnosis of congenital toxoplasmosis and has been reported by Eida et al. (2009) and El Deeb et al. (2012). However, no clinical follow-up was reported.
Table 4.
Population | Pregnancy stage | Governorate | No. tested | No. positive (%) | Test | Additional tests | Remarks | Reference | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
IgM | PCR/blood | ||||||||
Abortion | NS | Sharkia | 62 | 17 (27.4) | IFA1 | ND | ND | 3 had high Ab titre (1:1024), tachyzoites in histological section. No photographs were given | El-Ridi et al. (1991b) |
Complication | 10 | 3 (30.0) | |||||||
Complication | NS | Alexandria | 100 | 65 (65.0) | ELISA-IgG21 | ND | ND | – | Hammouda et al. (1993) |
Repeated abortion | NS | Alexandria | 100 | 37 (37.0) | IHA | 19 (19.0) | ND | – | Sahwi et al. (1995) |
Complication | NS | Kalubiya | 38 | 17 (44.7) | ELISA | 9 (23.7) | ND | – | Hussein et al. (2001) |
Complication | NS | Dakahlia | 70 | 57 (81.4) | ELISA-IgG19 | 42 (60.0) | ND | Other complications causes were excluded | Soliman et al. (2001) |
Abortion | NS | Kalubiya | 40 | 14 (35.0) | ELISA-IgG1 | 12 (30.0) | 8 (20.0) | IgG in 6 (40%) and 2 (13%) of neonates from abortion and early labour groups. | El Fakahany et al. (2002) |
Early labour | 10 | 5 (50.0) | 3 (33.0) | 5 (50.0) | |||||
CMF | 5 | 1 (20.0) | None | 3 (60.0) | |||||
Abortion | 1st | Cairo | 40 | 16 (40.0) | ELISA-IgG | 10 (25.0) | 20 (50.0) | – | Abdel-Hameed and Hassanein (2004) |
Abortion | 2nd | 33 | 10 (30.3) | 9 (27.2) | 16 (48.0) | ||||
IUFD | 1st | 27 | 4 (14.8) | 3 (11.1) | 2 (7.4) | ||||
Abortion | NS | Sharkia | 25 | 10 (40.0) | IHA1 | 3 (12.0) | ND | – | Awadallah (2010) |
Complication | 1st, 2nd | Assiut | 100 | 17 (17.0) | ELISA-IgG2 | 22 (22.0) | ND | 5 had IgM only; they were primigravida with early abortions | Shatat et al. (2006)a |
Abortion | NS | Dakahlia | 75 | 75 (100) | NS | 75 (100) | 58 (77.3) | Authors selected positive IgG and IgM cases only | Abo El Naga et al. (2008)a |
Complication | NS | Zagazig | 100 | 62 (62.0) | ELISA-IgG20 | 47 (47.0) | 73 (73.0) | – | El Gamal et al. (2013) |
Abortion | NS | NS | 56 | 34 (60.7) | ELISA-IgG3 | ND | 9/34 (26.5) | Seropositive cases only were PCR tested | Hassanain et al. (2013) |
Abortion | 1st | Qena | 76 | 35 (46.1) | ELISA-IgG4 | 14 (18.4) | ND | A case had tachyzoites in placental sections. Illustrations are not clear. | Tammam et al. (2013)a |
Abortion | 1st | Beni Suef, Cairo | 56 | 17 (30.4) | ELISA-IgG | 12 (21.4) | 18 (32.1)b | – | Hassanain et al. (2015) |
2nd | 30 | 8 (26.7) | 5 (16.7) | 10 (33.3)b | |||||
3rd | 15 | 7 (46.7) | 2 (13.3) | 6 (40.0)b | |||||
CMF | – | 5 | 2 (40.0) | 1 (20.0) | 1 (20.0)b | ||||
Complication | NS | Minia | 120 | 53 (44.1) | ELISA-IgG2 | 29 (24.1) | ND | Other abortifacient causes were excluded | Kamal et al. (2015)a |
Complication | Different | Menoufiya | 92 | 48 (52.2) | ELISA-IgG5 | 9 (9.7) | 26 (28.6)b | IgG in aborted women (n = 73) was 63.9% IgG vs 42.9% in those who did not abort (n = 19) | Nassef et al. (2015)a |
Abortion | NS | Kalubiya | 37 | 22 (59.5) | ELISA-IgG22 | 7 (18.9) | ND | Other abortifacient causes were excluded. The parasite was not detected in placental sections | Hussein et al. (2016) |
Complication | Different | Zagazig | 100 | ND | NS | 51 (51.0) | 38 (38.0) | 35 had low IgG avidity | El-Settawy et al. (2016) |
Complication | Different | Assiut | 182 | 97 (53.3) | ELISA-IgG8 | 52 (28.6) | ND | Mandour et al. (2017)a | |
Abortion | 1st | Cairo | 139 | 62 (44.6) | ELISA-IgG2 | 4/77 (5.1) | 8/77 (10.2) | IgM and PCR on 77 IgG negatives | Abd El Aal et al. (2018) |
Abortion | 1st | Cairo, Giza | 32 | 12 (37.5) | ELISA-IgG9 | 11 (34.3) | 11 (34.4)b | – | Barakat et al. (2018) |
2nd | 21 | 8 (38.1) | 8 (38.1) | 8 (38.1)b | |||||
3rd | 16 | 8 (50.0) | 6 (37.5) | 5 (31.1)b | |||||
CMF | – | 4 | 2 (50.0) | 1 (25.0) | 3 (75.0)b | ||||
Abortion | Different | Beni-Suef | 35 | 25 (71.4) | ELISA-IgG3 | Done | ND | Authors did not give a separate IgG and IgM prevalence | Hassanain et al. (2018a) |
Ab, antibody; ND, not done; NS, not stated; IUFD, intrauterine fetal death; CMF, congenital malformation.
Numbers in parenthesis are percentages.
Risk assessment, see Table 6.
DNA in the placenta.
Although T. gondii-infected women can abort, toxoplasmosis is not a common cause of habitual abortion in women (reviewed in Dubey and Beattie, 1988). Numerous women in Egypt who aborted fetuses have been tested for toxoplasmosis (Table 4). In some of the reports, T. gondii DNA was detected in placentas or unspecified products of conception. Once again, the accuracy of PCR requires stringent controls to minimize contamination. Caution is needed that the presence of T. gondii DNA in placenta does not equate with congenital infection.
An estimate of the rate of congenital toxoplasmosis can be obtained by data on seroconversion of mothers during pregnancy, serological testing of fetus during pregnancy and after parturition, and clinical follow-up of newborn children. There are no concrete data concerning prevalence of congenital toxoplasmosis in Egypt. To confirm congenital infection, sera would be tested at 12 months showing IgG presence or evidence of neo-synthetized antibodies by Western-blot in children blood from birthday or 3 months of age (Robert-Gangneux and Dardé, 2012).
In summary, there is no definitive evidence of toxoplasmosis abortion or definitive diagnosis of congenital toxoplasmosis in any of these cases.
Post-natal clinical toxoplasmosis
Lymphadenopathy, fever and ocular involvement are some of the common symptoms of acquired toxoplasmosis (Peyron et al., 2016). In addition to the report of these symptoms in pregnant women in Egypt discussed by Eida et al. (2009), there are few other reports of toxoplasmosis-associated lymphadenopathy from Egypt (Azab et al., 1983; Tolba et al., 2014) based on mainly serologic examination. There are also a few reports of ocular toxoplasmosis in Egypt (Table 7). Rifaat et al. (1973b) studied the case of an 18-year-old female student who complained of headache and impaired vision in the right eye. Based on the revealed lesions of uveitis altogether with the positive DT titre (1:128), authors diagnosed the case as toxoplasmic uveitis. This case was treated with pyrimethamine and sulfadiazine for 2 weeks. A month after treatment, lesions regressed, the vision acuity was enhanced. Based on positive serology and the lesion, ocular toxoplasmosis has been reported by others (Azab et al., 1983; El-Ridi et al., 1991a; Safar et al., 1995). Recently, Tolba et al. (2014) reported three chorioretinitis cases from Alexandria; the three cases were IgG-positive, while a single case had IgM antibodies. No test was performed in aqueous or vitrous humour.
Table 7.
Governorate | No. tested | No. positive (%) | Test | Titres | Lesion | Mice inoculation | PCR | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cairo | 1 | 1 (100) | DT | 1:128 | Uveitis | ND | ND | Rifaat et al. (1973b) |
Cairo | 30 | 18 (40.0) | IFA5 | 1:16–1:64 | NS | ND | ND | Azab et al. (1983) |
Sharkia | 34 | 9 (26.5) | IFA1
IHA5 |
281.6–576.7a | Anterior and posterior uveitis | ND | ND | El-Ridi et al. (1991a) |
Giza | 70 | 15 (21.1) 36 (51.4) |
IFA IHA |
NS | Retinochoroiditis | ND | ND | Safar et al. (1995) |
Alexandria | 3 | 3 (100) 2 (66.6) |
ELISA8-IgG ELISA8-IgM |
– | Chorioretinitis | ND | +ve 3/3 | Tolba et al. (2014) |
NS, not stated; ND, not done; +ve, positive.
Antibody titres are given in means.
Toxoplasmosis in animals
Toxoplasmosis can cause severe illness in many domestic and wild animal species. It is a common cause of abortion in sheep and goats worldwide (Dubey, 2010). Many species of animals, such as New World primates, Australasian marsupials, Pallas and Sand cats, are highly susceptible to acute toxoplasmosis, whereas cattle, buffaloes and horses are resistant to toxoplasmosis (Dubey, 2010). Additionally, animals appear reservoirs of T. gondii infection. Humans become infected postnatally by ingesting food and water contaminated with oocysts shed by felids and by eating undercooked meat. Available information on T. gondii infection in domestic animals from Egypt is summarized here.
Cats
The published seroprevalence estimates in cats are highly variable (12.5–97.4%) (Table 8), depending on the life style and age of cats and the serological test. It is noteworthy that five of the six surveys are from Cairo and Giza governorates.
Table 8.
Source of sera | Governorate | No. tested | No. positive (%) | Test (Cut-off) | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Stray | Cairo and Giza | 318 | 126 (39.6) | DT (1:4) | Rifaat et al. (1976c) |
Stray | Cairo | 177 | 105 (58.8) | IFA1 | Aboul-Magd et al. (1988) |
Stray | Gharbiya | 92 | 17 (18.5) 19 (20.7) |
IHA2
IFA1 |
Abu-Zakham et al. (1989) |
House-hold | 32 | 4 (12.5) 5 (15.6) |
|||
Stray kittens | Cairo, Giza and Kalubiya | 34 | 24 (70.6) | LAT1 | Hassanain et al. (2008) |
House-hold Kittens | 63 | 32 (50.8) | |||
Stray | Giza | 158 | 154 (97.4) | MAT (1:5) | Al-Kappany et al. (2010) |
Stray | Cairo | 180 | 172 (95.5) | MAT (1:5) | Al-Kappany et al. (2011) |
A very high seroprevalence (>95%) of T. gondii was reported in stray cats. The specificity of the MAT for cats was confirmed by isolation of viable T. gondii (Al-Kappany et al., 2010). Brains, hearts and tongues from 112 seropositive cats were bioassayed individually in mice. Toxoplasma gondii was isolated from 83 hearts, 53 tongues and 36 brains. We are not aware of any report of clinical toxoplasmosis in cats from Egypt.
Cats are the key hosts in the epidemiology of T. gondii because they are the only hosts that can excrete environmentally resistant oocysts in feces. There is limited information on T. gondii oocyst excretion by cats in Egypt (Table 9). Of these, two reports by Rifaat et al. (1976c) and Al-Kappany et al. (2010) need comment. Rifaat et al. (1976c) found T. gondii-like oocysts in feces of 88 (41.3%) of 213 stray cats trapped from Cairo and Giza. A total of 318 cats were trapped, euthanized and blood and feces were collected for T. gondii testing. Antibodies to T. gondii were found in 126 (39.6%) by the DT. Nearly half of the cats were considered adults based on weights of cats. Out of these 318 cats, feces of 213 cats were tested for coccidian oocysts. Feces with T. gondii-like oocysts were bioassayed in mice, and the identity of Toxoplasma oocysts was proven by sub-inoculation of infected mouse tissues to clean mice. Toxoplasma gondii-like oocysts were found in 88 cats (20 in 6–8 weeks old, six in 9–12 weeks old, seven in 4–5 months old and 55 in cats older than 6 months). Serological results and oocyst excretion were compared in 33 cats; 14 (35.7%) of 33 cats excreting oocysts were seropositive, and 19 (15.8%) were seronegative. Thus, both seropositive and seronegative cats were excreting oocysts. From the results presented, it is uncertain whether the results were based solely on the presence of antibodies in mice fed oocysts or demonstration of T. gondii in mouse tissues. If the results were based on serology alone, then data will not exclude the related parasite, Hammondia hammondi infection (Dubey, 2010). There are no archived data or specimens for validation. At any rate, this report from Egypt is the highest prevalence of excretion of T. gondii-like oocysts compared with reports from other countries (Dubey, 2010).
Table 9.
Governorate | No. tested | No. positive (%) | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Cairo and Giza | 213 | 88 (41.3)a | Rifaat et al. (1976c) |
Cairo, Giza and Kalubiya | 97 | 12 (12.3) | Hassanain et al. (2008) |
Giza | 158 | Nonea | Al-Kappany et al. (2010) |
Sharkia | 50 | 25 (50.0)a | Awadallah (2010) |
Kafr El Sheikh | 113 | 10 (9.0) | Khalafalla (2011) |
Sharkia | 100 | 2 (2.0)b | Abd El-Ghany and Amin (2012) |
Kafr El Sheikh | 100 | 2 (2.0) | Elmonir et al. (2017) |
See comments in the text.
T. gondii DNA was isolated from both cases.
Al-Kappany et al. (2010) did not find T. gondii oocysts in feces of 158 stray cats from Giza, probably because most (97.4%) were seropositive to T. gondii and had already excreted oocysts. Awadallah (2010) found T. gondii-like oocysts in 25 (50%) of 50 cat feces from Sharkia; however, oocysts identity was not confirmed by bioassay or PCR.
Toxoplasma gondii oocysts are excreted only for a short period (<2 weeks) in the life of the cat and by the time cats become seropositive, oocysts have already been excreted. However, cats can re-excrete oocysts more than once in life (Dubey, 2010).
Isolation of T. gondii oocysts from the environment
It is technically difficult to isolate T. gondii oocysts from running water (Dubey, 2010). However, Elfadaly et al. (2018) observed T. gondii-like oocysts in seven (2.9%) of 245 water samples collected from ground pumps (water supplies) in rural areas of Giza governorate. The identity of the recovered oocysts was not confirmed. El-Tras and Tayel (2009) tested 30 water samples from irrigation canals by bioassay in mice. It is not clear whether all samples were infected, and if samples were inoculated separately or in pools. After 6 weeks, sera of inoculated mice were tested using direct agglutination test for T. gondii; five were reported to be positives; however, the antibody titres were not stated and mice were not tested for viable T. gondii. They also bioassayed in kittens’ 30 vegetable samples irrigated by the sampled water. Four cats excreted T. gondii-like oocysts; however, oocysts infectivity was not reported, and it is not clear if the kittens were tested for T. gondii antibodies before use in the experiment. Recently, methods for detection and viability measure of T. gondii oocysts were described and they could be employed in Egypt in order to determine the contamination of the environment (Rousseau et al., 2019).
Dogs
Dogs are considered a source of infection for humans because they roll over and eat cat feces among other foods ingested (Frenkel et al., 2003). Antibodies to T. gondii have been demonstrated in the sera of dogs and viable T. gondii has been isolated from naturally infected dog tissues (Table 10). Nothing is known of clinical toxoplasmosis in dogs from Egypt.
Table 10.
Governorate | No. tested | No. positive (%) | Test | Cut-off | Mice bioassay | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cairo | 45 | 11 (24.4) | DT | 1:16 | ND | Rifaat et al. (1970) |
Cairo | 82 | 40 (46.5) | DT | 1:4 | Yesa | Rifaat et al. (1977a) |
Cairo | 43 | 12 (27.9) | DT | 1:16 | ND | Khaled et al. (1982) |
Giza | 51 | 50 (98.0) | MAT | 1:4 | Yesb | El Behairy et al. (2013) |
ND, not done.
Viable T. gondii was isolated from the brains of two dogs.
Viable T. gondii was isolated from 22 out of 43 hearts of seropositive dogs.
Food animals
Sheep
The estimated sheep population in Egypt is 5.5 million (Food and Agriculture Organization, 2015). Sheep meat is widely consumed in Egypt, especially during religious holidays. The consumption of undercooked dish ‘Kabob and kofta’ is popular (Hassan-Wassef, 2004), which favours T. gondii transmission to humans. Most reports used sera from sheep at abattoirs, while few studies were conducted on sheep in farms (Table 11). In a histological study, T. gondii tissue cysts were noted in brain sections of two out of 60 sheep from a herd in Suez governorate (Anwar et al., 2013); we consider the two tissue cysts illustrated in Figure 4 of their paper as Sarcocystis cysts (J.P. Dubey, own opinion).
Table 11.
Governorate | Source of sera | No. tested | No. positive (%) | Test | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Different | Abattoir, farms | 398 | 47 (12.1) | IFA5 | Maronpot and Botros (1972) |
Beheira | Abattoir | 21 | 7 (33.3) | DT (1:8) | Rifaat et al. (1977b) |
Sharkia | 34 | 11 (32.3) | |||
Port Said | Abattoir | 7 | 2 (28.5) | DT (1:8) | Rifaat et al. (1977c) |
Ismailia | 21 | 4 (19.0) | |||
Suez | 24 | 8 (33.3) | |||
Cairo | NS | 100 | 37 (37.0), 51 (51.0) | SAT, DT | Michael (1977) |
100 | 40 (40.0), 9 (9.0) | SAT, CFT | |||
90 | 26 (28.8), 23 (25.5) | SAT, IHA4 | |||
Menoufiya | Abattoir | 54a | 9 (16.6) | DT (1:8) | Rifaat et al. (1978) |
Assiut | Abattoir, veterinary hospital | 169 | 115 (67.9) | DT (1:4) | Fahmy et al. (1979b) |
Alexandria | Abattoir | 40 | 29 (72.5) | DT (1:8) | Rifaat et al. (1979) |
Sharkia | Abattoir | 17 | 5 (29.4) | IHA5 | El-Ridi et al. (1990) |
Kafr ElSheikh | Ewes from a farm | 102 | 47 (46.0), 51 (50.0), 50 (49.0) | ELISA17, IFA2, DAT | El-Ghaysh and Mansour (1994) |
Gharbia | Abattoir | 105 | 52 (49.5) | IHA5 | Ibrahim et al. (1997) |
Cairo | Abattoir | 300 | 131 (43.7), 125 (41.7), 110 (37.0), 102 (34.0) | MAT (1:25), ELISA17, IFA4, DT | Shaapan et al. (2008) |
Giza | Farms | 320 | 152 (47.5), 141 (44.0) | IHA, ELISA | Barakat et al. (2009) |
Sharkia | Abattoir | 50 | 9 (18.0) | IHA1 | Awadallah (2010) |
Fayoum | NS | 62 | 61 (98.4), 56 (90.3) | ELISA16, DT | Ghoneim et al. (2010) |
Cairo | Abattoir | 280 | 141 (50.4), 172 (61.4) | LAT1, ELISA17 | Hassanain et al. (2011) |
Sharkia | Farms | 100 | 85 (85.0) | IHA1 | Abd El-Ghany and Amin (2012) |
NS | NS | 280 | 172 (61.4) | ELISA16 | Hassanain et al. (2013) |
Dakahlia | NS | 292 | 122 (41.7), 193 (66.1), 181 (62.0) | LAT3, IHA1, ELISA16 | Younis et al. (2015) |
Qena | Individual, small farms | 37 | 18 (48.7), 21(56.8) | LAT1, ELISA15 | Fereig et al. (2016) |
Kafr ElSheikh | 46 | 32 (69.6), 32 (69.6) | |||
Menoufiya | 28 | 3 (10.7), 4 (14.3) | |||
Assiut | Rural areas | 50 | 22 (44.0), 43 (86.0) | LAT2, ELISA2 | Kuraa and Malek (2016) |
Cairo, Giza, Kalubiya | NS | 254 | 163 (64.2) | ELISA17 | El Fadaly et al. (2017) |
Menoufiya, Gharbia | Public market | 170 | 88 (51.7) | ELISA14 (0.096) | Ibrahim et al. (2017) |
Cairo | Ewes from small farms | 25 | 10 (40.0), 7 (28.0) | OTRT, ELISA12 | Abd El-Razik et al. (2018) |
Giza | 33 | 20 (60.6), 17 (51.5) | |||
Skarkia | 55 | 36 (65.4), 34 (61.8) | |||
Cairo | Abattoir | 193 | 105 (54.4), 9 (48.7) | ||
Cairo | Abattoir | 100 | 12 (12.0), 20 (20.0) | ELISA13, IFA2 | Al-Kappany et al. (2018) |
Dakahlia | 100 | 27 (27.0), 38 (38.0) | |||
Sharkia | 99 | 17 (17.1), 34 (34.3) | |||
Giza | 99 | 26 (26.2), 32 (32.3) | |||
Ismailia | Abattoir | 100 | 34 (34.0), 33 (33.0) | ELISA, MAT | El-Gawady et al. (2018) |
Fifty-four were examined: 27 from Menoufiya governorate and 37 from Tahrir province (currently known as Beheira governorate).
Toxoplasma gondii is an important cause of abortion in sheep worldwide but little is known of its occurrence in sheep from Egypt (Dubey, 2010). Direct evidence of ovine congenital toxoplasmosis was provided by Rifaat et al. (1977a) who isolated viable T. gondii by mouse bioassay from tissues of an aborted lamb. Toxoplasma gondii DNA has been demonstrated in aborted fetal tissues (Table 12). Finding T. gondii parasites or T. gondii DNA only indicates congenital transmission. Histopathological evaluation and exclusion of other causes of abortion are necessary to establish cause–effect relationship. Serological testing of ewes is of little help because high levels of T. gondii IgG can persist for months and IgM antibodies have already peaked in aborted ewes (Dubey, 2010).
Table 12.
Animal | Governorate | No. tested | Serological test | No. positive (%) | Antibody titres range | Mice bioassay | PCR | Other abortifacient agents | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pregnant sheep 15 days before parturition with a history of late pregnancy abortions | NS | 10 | IHA | 10 (100) | 1:512–1:2048 | ND | ND | −ve Brucella abortus | Hassanain et al. (1992) |
Pregnant goats at different stages of pregnancy | Kalubiya | 48 | IHA-IgG MAT-IgM |
17 (35.4) 11 (22.9) |
1:128–1:512 | Donea | ND | ND | Ramadan et al. (2007) |
Aborted sheep and goats at late stage of pregnancy | Giza | NS | LAT | (100) | NS | ND | +ve 8 lambs and 4 kids | −ve other abortifacient agentsb | Ahmed et al. (2008) |
Pregnant sheep from 3 flocks with history of previous abortions | Sharkia | 100 | IHA1-IgG IHA1-IgM |
85 (85.0) None |
1:160–1:2560 | ND | ND | ND | Abd El-Ghany and Amin (2012) |
Pregnant sheep from a flock suffering from abortion | Kalubiya | 30 | LAT4 | 16 (53.3) | ⩾1:64 | Donec | 12 (40.0) | ND | Khater et al. (2013) |
Pregnant sheep with history of abortion | Nile Delta | 416 | IHA1-IgM | 129 (31.0) | NS | ND | ND | +ve Brucella melitensis in 51 (12.2)d | Mahboub et al. (2013) |
Pregnant goats with history of abortion | 76 | 13 (17.1) | +ve Brucella melitensis in 28 (36.8)d | ||||||
Aborted goats | Cairo, Giza and kalubiya | 35 | DAT | 28 (80.0)e | 1:25–1:400 | ND | ND | ND | Attia et al. (2017) |
ND, not done; NS, not stated; +ve, positive; −ve, negative.
Numbers in parenthesis are percentages.
Viable T. gondii was isolated from tissues of two stillborns, see comment in the text.
Brucella, Salmonella, Chlamydia and Neospora caninum
Details were not given.
Data are not separated between T. gondii and Brucella melitensis.
Tachyzoites were found in placental sections, however neither details nor illustrations were given.
Goats
Goat population in Egypt is ~4 million. Goats are usually reared within sheep herds. In a popular system in Egypt, particularly in suburban areas, small numbers of goats are kept in houses, and can roam to feed on the garbage along with cats and dogs. Using different serological tests, high T. gondii seroprevalence was reported from goats in Egypt (Table 13).
Table 13.
Governorate | Source of sera | No. tested | No. positive (%) | Test | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Different | Abattoir, farms | 234 | 111 (47.4) | IFA5 | Maronpot and Botros (1972) |
Assiut | Abattoir, veterinary hospital | 98 | 53 (54.1) | DT (1:4) | Fahmy et al. (1979b) |
Sharkia | Abattoir | 14 | 4 (28.6) | IHA5 | El-Ridi et al. (1990) |
Gharbia | Abattoir | 78 | 38 (48.7) | IHA5 | Ibrahim et al. (1997) |
Giza | Small farms | 306 | 182 (59.4), 170 (55.4) | IHA, ELISA | Barakat et al. (2009) |
Sharkia | Abattoir | 50 | 8 (16.0) | IHA1 | Awadallah (2010) |
Fayoum | NS | 24 | 10 (41.7), 5 (20.8) | ELISA16, DT | Ghoneim et al. (2010) |
Giza | Abattoir | 230 | 102 (44.3) | MAT (1:25) | Shaapan et al. (2010) |
Cairo, Beni-Suef, Sharkia | Herds | 182 | 77 (42.3) | IHA3 | Abdel-Rahman et al. (2012) |
Minia | Abattoir | 100 | 64 (64.0) | IHA1 | Abdel-Hafeez et al. (2015) |
Dakahlia | NS | 81 | 40 (49.4), 52 (64.2), 41 (50.6) | LAT3, IHA1, ELISA16 | Younis et al. (2015) |
Qena | Individual, small farms | 27 | 10 (37.0), 13 (48.2) | LAT1, ELISA15 | Fereig et al. (2016) |
Kafr ElSheikh | 30 | 30 (66.7), 30 (66.7) | |||
Menoufiya | 37 | 33 (8.1), 37 (10.8) | |||
Assiut | Rural areas | 57 | 27 (47.4), 50 (87.7) | LAT2, ELISA2 | Kuraa and Malek (2016) |
Cairo, Giza, Kalubiya | NS | 293 | 127 (43.3) | ELISA17 | El Fadaly et al. (2017) |
Cairo | Does from small farms | 32 | 10 (31.2), 9 (28.1) | OTRT, ELISA12 | Abd El-Razik et al. (2018) |
Giza | 22 | 9 (40.1), 8 (36.3) | |||
Skarkia | 41 | 24 (56.1), 22 (53.6) | |||
Cairo | Abattoir | 51 | 28 (53.0), 22 (43.1) | ||
Dakahlia | Abattoir | 100 | 59 (59.0), 54 (54.0) | ELISA13, IFA2 | Al-Kappany et al. (2018) |
Ismailia | Abattoir | 100 | 32 (32.0), 31 (31.0) | ELISA, MAT | El-Gawady et al. (2018) |
Like sheep, little is known of toxoplasmal abortion in goats from Egypt; available information is summarized in Table 12. Ramadan et al. (2007) found IgG antibodies in 17 (35.4%) of 48 pregnant Balady goats from Kalubiya governorate; 11 (22.9%) of them had IgM. Three goats in the mid pregnancy stage were sulfadimidine-treated for 5 successive days, while another three kept untreated as controls. No abortions had occurred in the treated group and the delivered kids were seronegative, while one of the untreated goats delivered two seropositive-stillborns (IgG and IgM). Viable T. gondii was isolated from tissues of the stillborns.
Transmission of T. gondii to humans by consumption of raw goat milk is of public health significance (Dubey et al., 2014). Consumption of goat milk is popular in Egyptian rural areas. Abdel-Rahman et al. (2012) fed eight cats raw milk from eight seropositive goats (four IgG and four IgM positive goats); we are not aware of the validity of the used commercial kits. Toxoplasma gondii-like oocysts were found in feces from all cats of the IgM group and one cat from the IgG group; however, oocysts infectivity was not proven. Sadek et al. (2015) found T. gondii tachyzoites, respectively, in five of 58 and six of 47 milk samples from sheep and goats; this is a very high proportion and the illustrations are not clear. In addition, Ahmed et al. (2014) found T. gondii DNA in four (8%) of 50 milk samples from goats. The presence of T. gondii DNA in milk does not mean the viability of the parasite.
Camels
In Egypt, camel meat is inexpensive and consumed mainly in some governorates such as Cairo, Kalubiya, Sharkia and Assiut. It seems that the published reports of toxoplasmosis in camels from Egypt do not reflect the true prevalence in Egyptian camels because most of the sampled camels were imported, particularly those slaughtered at the official abattoir in Cairo (El Basateen). Seroprevalence data are summarized in Table 14. Moreover, T. gondii oocysts were revealed from cats fed pooled meat samples from camels (Abdel-Gawad et al., 1984). Toxoplasma gondii DNA was not found in 50 raw camel milk samples (Saad et al., 2018).
Table 14.
Governorate | Source of sera | No. tested | No. positive (%) | Test | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Different | Abattoir, farms | 49 | 3 (6.1) | IFA5 | Maronpot and Botros (1972) |
Ismailia | Abattoir | 43 | 29 (67.4) | DT (1:8) | Rifaat et al. (1977c) |
Assiut | Individual owners | 80 | 12 (15.0) | DT (1:16) | Michael et al. (1977) |
Menoufiya | 80 | 15 (18.7) | |||
Matrouh | 80 | 40 (50.0) | |||
Menoufiya | Abattoir | 30 | 17 (56.7) | DT (1:8) | Rifaat et al. (1978) |
Assiut | Abattoir, veterinary hospital | 119 | 30 (24.4) | DT (1:4) | Fahmy et al. (1979a) |
Sharkia | Abattoir | 19 | 5 (26.3) | IHA5 | El-Ridi et al. (1990) |
Gharbia | Abattoir | 36 | 6 (16.7) | IHA5 | Ibrahim et al. (1997) |
Cairo | Abattoir | 166 | 29 (17.4) | MAT (1:25) | Hilali et al. (1998) |
Cairo | Abattoir | 150 | 127 (18.0), 230 (20.0), 346 (30.7), 441 (27.3) | MATa (1:25) | Shaapan and Khalil (2008) |
Assiut | Rural areas | 56 | 20 (35.7), 54 (96.4) | LAT2, ELISA2 | Kuraa and Malek (2016) |
Kalubiya | Abattoir | 120 | 6 (5.0), 63 (52.6) | IHA3, ELISA8 | Ahmed et al. (2017) |
Cairo, Giza, Kalubiya | NS | 34 | 9 (26.5) | ELISA17 | El Fadaly et al. (2017) |
MAT was conducted using formalin-treated whole tachyzoites from different antigen; 1RH strain, 2local equine strain, 3local camel strain and 4local sheep strain.
Cattle and water buffaloes
Both cattle and buffaloes are considered resistant to T. gondii infection (Dubey, 2010). Apparently, they can clear the infection in their tissues and their role in transmission to humans is uncertain; however, some reports indicated the substantial role of beef in T. gondii transmission (Opsteegh et al., 2011; Belluco et al., 2018). Although antibodies to T. gondii have been reported in both species in Egypt (Tables 15 and 16), viable parasite has not been isolated from beef.
Table 15.
Governorate | Source of sera | No. tested | No. positive (%) | Test | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Port Said | NS | 35 | None | Skin test | Rifaat et al. (1968) |
Different | Abattoir, farms | 207 | 52 (25.1) | IFA5 | Maronpot and Botros (1972) |
Beheira | Abattoir | 15 | 7 (46.6) | DT (1:8) | Rifaat et al. (1977b) |
Dakahlia | 60 | 44 (30.1) | |||
Sharkia | 8 | None | |||
Fayoum | 132 | 28 (21.2) | |||
Port Said | Abattoir | 16 | 5 (31.2) | DT (1:8) | Rifaat et al. (1977c) |
Ismailia | 16 | 4 (25.0) | |||
Suez | 34 | 11 (32.2) | |||
Kalubiya | Abattoir | 84 | 16 (19.0) | DT (1:8) | Rifaat et al. (1978) |
Gharbia | 171 | 37 (21.6) | |||
Menoufiya | 68 | 24 (35.2) | |||
Kafr ElSheikh | 50 | 22 (44.0) | |||
Dameitta | Abattoir | 40 | 22 (55.0) | DT (1:8) | Rifaat et al. (1979) |
Alexandria | 65 | 14 (21.5) | |||
Assiut | Abattoir, veterinary hospital | 106 | 50 (47.0) | DT (1:4) | Fahmy et al. (1979b) |
Sharkia | Abattoir | 19 | 4 (21.4) | IHA5 | El-Ridi et al. (1990) |
Gharbia | Abattoir | 39 | 18 (46.2) | IHA5 | Ibrahim et al. (1997) |
Sharkia | Veterinary station | 93 | 10 (10.7) | ELISA14 | Ibrahim et al. (2009) |
Sharkia | Abattoir | 50 | 6 (12.0) | IHA1 | Awadallah (2010) |
NS | NS | 88 | 17 (19.3) | ELISA16 | Hassanain et al. (2013) |
Minia | Abattoir | 100 | None | IHA1 | Abdel-Hafeez et al. (2015) |
Qena | Individual, small farms | 225 | 66 (29.3), 55 (24.4) | LAT1, ELISA15 | Fereig et al. (2016) |
Sohag | 76 | 22 (29.0), 16 (21.1) | |||
Assiut | Rural areas | 56 | 18 (32.1), 41 (73.2) | LAT2, ELISA2 | Kuraa and Malek (2016) |
Cairo, Giza, Kalubiya | NS | 45 | 16 (35.5) | ELISA17 | El Fadaly et al. (2017) |
Table 16.
Governorate | Source of sera | No. tested | No. positive (%) | Test | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Port Said | NS | 51 | 5 (9.8) | Skin test | Rifaat et al. (1968) |
Gharbia | 60 | 3 (5.0) | |||
Different | Abattoir, farms | 211 | 59 (28.0) | IFA5 | Maronpot and Botros (1972) |
Beheira | Abattoir | 14 | 4 (28.5) | DT (1:8) | Rifaat et al. (1977b) |
Dakahlia | 60 | 18 (30.0) | |||
Sharkia | 24 | 4 (9.5) | |||
Fayoum | 280 | 83 (29.6) | |||
Port Said | Abattoir | 48 | 16 (33.3) | DT (1:8) | Rifaat et al. (1977c) |
Ismailia | 109 | 13 (11.9) | |||
Suez | 85 | 16 (18.8) | |||
Kalubiya | Abattoir | 92 | 39 (42.4) | DT (1:8) | Rifaat et al. (1978) |
Menoufiya | 98 | 22 (24.4) | |||
Assiut | Abattoir, veterinary hospital | 212 | 93 (43.9) | DT (1:8) | Fahmy et al. (1979b) |
Dameitta | Abattoir | 193 | 76 (34.2) | DT (1:4) | Rifaat et al. (1979) |
Alexandria | 80 | 9 (11.2) | |||
Sharkia | Abattoir | 15 | 3 (20.0) | IHA5 | El-Ridi et al. (1990) |
Cairo | Abattoir | 75 | 12 (16.0) | MAT (1:25) | Dubey et al. (1998) |
Giza | Abattoir | 160 | 36 (22.5) | MAT (1:25) | Shaapan et al. (2010) |
NS | NS | 32 | 11 (34.4) | ELISA16 | Hassanain et al. (2013) |
Assiut | Rural areas | 55 | 11 (20.0), 41 (74.5) | LAT2, ELISA2 | Kuraa and Malek (2016) |
Cairo, Giza, Kalubiya | NS | 41 | 7 (17.1) | ELISA17 | El Fadaly et al. (2017) |
El-Tras and Tayel (2009) isolated viable T. gondii from tissues of two out of 30 buffaloes; however, it needs confirmation because there are no valid reports on the isolation of T. gondii from buffalo meat (Dubey, 2010), and the parasite was not found in tissues of three calves experimentally infected with 200 000 T. gondii oocysts (de Oliviera et al., 2001). Moreover, T. gondii DNA was not found in 50 milk samples from cows (Ahmed et al., 2014). The report of the presence of T. gondii DNA in 6% (3/50) of buffalo bull semen samples from Egypt needs confirmation (Abd El-Razik et al., 2017).
Pigs
Due to religious concerns, pork is not popular in Egypt. Pigs are reared in small holdings mainly in Cairo and Kalubiya within a complete garbage feeding system including food remnants, rodents, and dead animals and birds. Thus, they are excellent indicators for the spread of T. gondii infection. Reports on the seroprevalence of T. gondii in pigs from Egypt are given in Table 17.
Table 17.
Governorate | Source of sera | No. tested | No. positive (%) | Test | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cairo | Abattoir | 142 | 31 (21.8) | IFA5 | Maronpot and Botros (1972) |
Alexandria | Abattoir | 50 | 25 (50.0) | DT (1:8) | Rifaat et al. (1979) |
Cairo | Abattoir | 100 | 14 (14.0) | IHA | Ibrahim (1990) |
Cairo | Abattoir | 150 | 74 (49.3) | MAT | Ghattas (1999)a |
Cairo | Farms | 230 | 172 (74.7) | IFA3 | Barakat et al. (2011) |
NS | NS | 230 | 185 (80.4) | ELISA16 | Hassanian et al. (2013) |
Cairo | Farms | 180 | 102 (56.6) | MAT | El Moghazy et al. (2011) |
94 (52.2) | ELISA | ||||
77 (42.7) | IHA4 | ||||
64 (35.5) | DT | ||||
El Minia | Abattoir | 100 | None | IHA1 | Abdel-Hafeez et al. (2015)b |
Viable T. gondii was isolated by both mice and cat bioassay.
Forty (40.0%) had IgM antibodies.
Viable T. gondii was isolated from two seropositive pigs (Botros et al., 1973) and seven (23.3%) of 30 pigs by mouse bioassay (Ghattas, 1999). Ghattas (1999) fed cats (T. gondii-seronegative) meats from seropositive pigs. Cats excreted T. gondii-like oocysts. The identity of the recovered oocysts was confirmed by oral inoculation in mice.
Equines
Generally, high T. gondii seroprevalences were reported in horses and donkeys from Egypt (Table 18). However, equine meat is not consumed by humans in Egypt. Anti-T. gondii antibodies were noted in seven out of 15 donkey milk samples (Haridy et al., 2010).
Table 18.
Species | Governorate | Source of sera | No. tested | No. positive (%) | Test | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Donkeys | Menoufiya | Rural areas | 121 | 79 (65.6) | ELISA17 | El-Ghaysh (1998) |
Horses | NS | Farms | 420 | 1160 (38.1), 2133 (31.7), 3217 (51.7), 170 (40.5), 202 (48.1) | ELISA-LA17, ELISA-LAunb17, ELISA-Lab17, IFAT4, MAT (1:25) | Ghazy et al. (2007)a |
Donkeys | Giza | Zoo abattoir | 200 | 189 (44.5), 2104 (52.0), 372 (36.0), 478 (39.0) | MAT (1:25) | Shaapan and Khalil (2008) b |
Draught horses | Cairo | Individual owners | 100 | 25 (25.0) | ELISA17 | Haridy et al. (2009) |
Working donkeys | Cairo | Individual owners | 100 | 45 (45.0) | ELISA17 | Haridy et al. (2010) |
Sport horses | Cairo | Main farm | 240 | 125 (52.1), 122 (50.8), 94 (39.2) | LAT3, MAT (1:25), ELISA17 | Shaapan et al. (2012) |
Donkeys | Dakahlia | NS | 79 | 35 (44.3), 53 (67.1), 54 (68.4) | LAT3, IHA1, ELISA16 | Younis et al. (2015) |
Horses | 54 | 27 (50.0), 39 (72.2), 39 (72.2) | ||||
Donkeys | Giza | Individual owners | 58 | 16 (27.6), 22 (37.9) | LAT1, ELISA15 | Fereig et al. (2016) |
Menoufiya | 43 | 13 (30.2), 11 (25.6) | ||||
Matrouh | 45 | 10 (22.2), 9 (20.0) |
ELISA were carried out using 1crude antigen (LA) prepared from local horse strain, and its purified immunogenetic fractions; 2bound (LAb) and 3unbound (LAunb) fractions.
MAT was carried out using formalin-treated whole tachyzoites from different antigen; 1RH strain, 2local equine strain, 3local camel strain and 4local sheep strain.
Viable T. gondii has been isolated from tissues of 25 slaughtered donkeys at Giza zoo abattoir. Toxoplasma gondii-like oocysts were found in nine of 25 cats fed donkey tissues (Younis et al., 2015); however, the identity of these oocysts was not confirmed. Moreover, viable T. gondii were isolated from horses slaughtered at the same zoo (Shaapan and Ghazy, 2007). Donkeys and horses are slaughtered in the zoo for feeding of wild felids which can excrete T. gondii oocysts.
Chickens and other avian species
Chickens and ducks are widely consumed in Egypt due to their relatively cheap prices in comparison to red meats. Free range (FR) system of rearing birds is common in rural areas particularly in villages of Upper Egypt. FR birds are considered as a common source of human infection (Dubey, 2010). High seroprevalence was reported from FR chicken in Egypt, indicating high oocyst-environmental contamination (Table 19). Hassanain et al. (1997) stated a direct correlation between T. gondii seroprevalence and the decrease in egg production, although the seropositives were at low titres (⩽1:64) and the parasite isolation was not done. Viable T. gondii was isolated from both FR and commercially farmed chicken in Egypt (Table 21).
Table 19.
Governorate | Source of sera | No. tested | No. positive (%) | Test | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
NS | NS | 30 | 15 (50.0) | DT (1:8) | Rifaat et al. (1969) |
Kalubiya | C Laying hensa | 600 | 320 (53.3), 200 (33.3) | CFT (1:8), IHA5 | Hassanain et al. (1997) |
Giza | M | 108 | 51 (47.4) | MAT (1:25) | El-Massry et al. (2000) |
Menoufiya, Beheira | FR | 121 | 49 (40.4) | MAT (1:5) | Dubey et al. (2003) |
Assiut | C | 90 | 10 (11.1) | MAT (1:50) | Deyab and Hassanein (2005) |
H | 60 | 18 (30.0) | |||
Kafr ElSheikh | FR | 84 | 32 (38.1) | IHA1 | Harfoush and Tahoon (2010) |
Different | FR | 108 | 75 (69.5) | ELISA16 | Barakat et al. (2012) |
C | 331 | 227 (68.5) | |||
Beni Suef | FR | 90 | 18 (20.0) | IHAb | Aboelhadid et al. (2013) |
SH | 125 | 12 (9.6) | |||
Delta region | FR | 97 | 16 (16.4) | ELISA14 | Ibrahim et al. (2016) |
SH | 207 | 18 (8.6) | |||
Cairo, Giza, kalubiya | FR | 88 | 33 (37.5) | ELISA17 | El Fadaly et al. (2017) |
FR, free range chickens; H, house-bred chickens; M, market chickens; C, commercially farmed chickens; SH, slaughterhouse.
Six hundred laying hens from three flocks (each of 12000 birds) suffered from drop in eggs production and high percent of embryonic mortalities.
This test is wrongly identified in the report as MAT.
Table 21.
Host | Governorate | Serological test | Samples | No. tested | No. positive (%) | References |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pig | Cairo | IFA | Heart, liver, kidney, brain | 1 | 1 (100) | Botros et al. (1973)a |
Pig | Cairo | MAT | Diaphragm | 30 | 7 (23.3) | Ghattas (1999)a |
Chicken | Beheira | MAT | Heart, brain | 49 | 19 (38.7) | Dubey et al. (2003)a |
Duck | 3 | 1 (33.3) | ||||
Buffalo | Middle Delta | ND | NS | 30 fresh | 2 (6.6) | El-Tras and Tayel (2009) |
30 frozen | None | |||||
Sheep | Cairo | LAT1 | Diaphragm | 28 | 28 (100) | Hassanain et al. (2011)a |
FR chicken | Different | ND | Hear, brain, breast | 60 | NC | El-Newishy et al. (2012) |
C chicken | 170 | |||||
Sheep | Cairo, Giza, Kalubiya | ELISA17 | Diaphragm, thigh muscles | 75 | 8 (10.7) | El Fadaly et al. (2017)a |
Goat | 49 | 4 (8.2) | ||||
Cattle | 16 | None | ||||
Buffalo | 7 | None | ||||
Camel | 4 | 2 (50.0) | ||||
FR chicken | 9 | 2 (22.2) | ||||
Sheep | Cairo | OTRT | Diaphragm | 34 | 15 (44.1) | Abd El-Razik et al. (2018)a |
Goat | 3 | 3 (100) |
ND, not done; NC, not clear; FR, free range; C, commercially farmed.
The studied samples were from seropositive animals.
Little is known of toxoplasmosis in ducks. In Egypt, T. gondii seroprevalence ranges from 10.5 to 55% using different serological tests in different duck breeds (El-Massry et al., 2000; Dubey et al., 2003; Harfoush and Tahoon, 2010; AbouLaila et al., 2011; Ibrahim et al., 2018). Viable T. gondii was isolated from one of three seropositive FR ducks from Beheira governorate (Dubey et al., 2003).
In other avian species, T. gondii seroprevalence was reported from 29.8% of 188 quails (Shaapan et al., 2011), and 59.5% of 173 turkeys (El-Massry et al., 2000) and 12.5% of 120 Ostriches (El-Madawy and Metawea, 2013). The latter found T. gondii DNA in the blood of nine ostriches. Additionally, T. gondii antibodies were reported from pigeons (Rifaat et al., 1969; Ibrahim et al., 2018).
Rabbits
Prevalence of T. gondii in rabbits from different Egyptian governorates is variable and ranges from 0 to 37.5% (Hilali et al., 1991; Ibrahim et al., 2009; Harfoush and Tahoon, 2010; Ashmawy et al., 2011; Abou Elez et al., 2017). Despite some reports placing the rabbit as a major source for human infection (Almeria et al., 2004), we think that the role of rabbits is not of such importance because 90% of rabbits in Egypt are fed commercial pellets in small farms and kept in hutches or cages, which limit the chances of oocyst ingestion.
Rodents
Rodents are important for T. gondii epidemiology because they serve as a source of infection for cats (Dubey, 2010). Reports on the seroprevalence of T. gondii in different species of rodents from Egypt are given in Table 20. Viable T. gondii was isolated by mouse bioassay (Rifaat et al., 1971, 1973d, 1976a) and/or cat bioassay (El Fadaly et al., 2016).
Table 20.
Species | Governorate | No. tested | No. positive (%) | Test | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rattus norvegicus | Cairo | 100 | 34 (34.0) | DT | Rifaat et al. (1971)a |
Rattus alexandrinus | Cairo | 110 | 47 (42.7) | DT | Rifaat et al. (1973d)a |
Acomys cahirinus | Different | 101 | 36 (36.3) | DT (1:8) | Rifaat et al. (1976a)a |
Rattus norvegicus | Port Said | 104 | 32 (30.8) | IHA | Morsy et al. (1981) |
Rattus norvegicus | Ismailia | 150 | 21 (12.6) | IHA5 | Morsy et al. (1982) |
Rattus rattus | 150 | 15 (10.0) | |||
Rattus norvegicus | Dakahlia | 200 | 26 (13.0) | IHA5 | El-Shazly et al. (1991) |
Rattus rattus | 228 | 20 (8.8) | |||
Mus musculus | 87 | None | |||
Acomys cahirinus | 69 | 4 (5.8) | |||
Rattus norvegicus | Cairo, Giza | 74 | 34 (45.9) | LAT1 | El Fadaly et al. (2016)b |
Rattus rattus | 108 | 21 (19.4) | |||
Rattus frugivorus | 96 | 13 (13.5) | |||
Rattus norvegicus | Giza | 79 | 3 (3.8) | ELISA | Mikhail et al. (2017) |
Rattus rattus | 46 | 2 (4.3) |
Viable T. gondii was isolated from brain pools by mice bioassay.
Viable T. gondii was isolated by both mice and cat bioassay.
Isolation of viable T. gondii from food animals
Viable T. gondii was isolated from tissues of different food animals and birds in Egypt by mouse bioassay (Table 21). Cat bioassay was also used in some studies, and T. gondii-like oocysts were excreted from cats fed pooled meat samples. However, no further definitive procedures for theses oocysts were done in many studies (Abdel-Gawad et al., 1984; El-Massry et al., 1990; Hassanain et al., 2011).
Perspective
There are many reports on toxoplasmosis in animals and humans from Egypt, but there is no statistically-valid prevalence study on the national level. Little is known concerning clinical toxoplasmosis in humans or livestock in Egypt. Toxoplasmosis is usually considered by the physicians in Egypt as a cause of abortions and complications in pregnant women; however, the published studies are not well-structured and lack definitive diagnosis. There is a great need to establish a well-planned study concerning congenital toxoplasmosis in Egypt. Reports on toxoplasmosis in animals were based on commercial kits with unconfirmed validity. A large-scale study is needed employing validated serological methods and includes procedures for isolation of the parasite to critically evaluate the role of different food animals from Egypt in the transmission of T. gondii to humans.
Acknowledgements
The findings and conclusions in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. This work is dedicated to late Professor Mosaad Hilali, Parasitology Department, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Cairo University, Egypt.
Financial support
Ibrahim Abbas is the recipient of a junior visit grant (USC17: 141) supported by the US-Egypt Science and Technology (STDF) Joint Fund.
Conflict of interest
None.
Ethical standards
Not applicable.
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