Seroepidemiology of human toxoplasmosis in Chile

Authors

  • Maria del C. Contreras Universidad de Chile; Facultad de Medicina; Departamento de Parasitologia
  • Hugo Schenone Universidad de Chile; Facultad de Medicina; Departamento de Parasitologia
  • Patricia Salinas Universidad de Chile; Facultad de Medicina; Departamento de Parasitologia
  • Lea Sandoval Universidad de Chile; Facultad de Medicina; Departamento de Parasitologia
  • Antonio Rojas Universidad de Chile; Facultad de Medicina; Departamento de Parasitologia
  • Fernando Villarroel Universidad de Chile; Facultad de Medicina; Escuela de Salud Pública
  • Fresia Solis Universidad de Chile; Facultad de Medicina; Escuela de Salud Pública

Keywords:

Toxoplasmosis, Seroepidemiology, Chile

Abstract

A series of already published and unpublished seroepidemiological surveys for toxoplasmosis, carried out in Chile in 1982-1994, is reviewed, expanded and analyzed. The surveys included 76,317 apparently healthy individuals of different ages (0.57% of the country's total population), from 309 urban and rural-periurban localities. Urban groups were integrated by blood donors, delivering mothers and middle grade schoolchildren, while rural-periurban individuals corresponded to unselected family groups. Blood samples were collected in filter paper. The presence of antibodies to Toxoplasma gondii was determined by the indirect hemagglutination test (IHAT), titers >; 16 were considered positive. The test resulted positive in 28,124 (36.9%) of the surveyed people. Two hundred and six (0.3%) individuals presented IHAT titers >; 1000, probably corresponding to acute or reactivated infections. A progressive increase of positive IHAT from northern to southern regions of the country was noted, phenomenom probably related to geographical conditions and to a higher production and consumption of different types of meat in the latter regions. It is postulated that ingestion of T. gondii cysts by humans is epidemiologically as important as ingestion of oocysts. The results presented stress the epidemiological importance of toxoplasmosis in humans, and warn about eventual implications in immunocompromised patients and in transplacental transmission, organ transplants and transfusions.

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Published

1996-12-01

Issue

Section

Soroepidemiology

How to Cite

Contreras, M. del C., Schenone, H., Salinas, P., Sandoval, L., Rojas, A., Villarroel, F., & Solis, F. (1996). Seroepidemiology of human toxoplasmosis in Chile . Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De São Paulo, 38(6), 431-435. https://www.revistas.usp.br/rimtsp/article/view/29415