Prevalence of zoonotic helminths in local house rats (Rattus rattus) in Nsukka, Eastern Nigeria

The occurrence o zoonoic helminths in house rats (Rattus rattus) constitute serious public healthrisks as these rats commonly cohabit with humans, and are known to be natural reservoirs of somehelminth inections of public health importance. This study surveyed the prevalence of the three major zoono...

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Main Authors: IF Onyenwe, JI Ihedioha, RI Ezeme
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Animal Research International 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ajol.info/index.php/ari/article/view/55977
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spelling ftjafricanj:oai:ojs.ajol.info:article/55977 2023-05-15T18:04:55+02:00 Prevalence of zoonotic helminths in local house rats (Rattus rattus) in Nsukka, Eastern Nigeria IF Onyenwe JI Ihedioha RI Ezeme 2010-06-29 application/pdf http://ajol.info/index.php/ari/article/view/55977 en eng Animal Research International http://ajol.info/index.php/ari/article/view/55977 Copyright is owned by the journal Animal Research International; Vol 6, No 3 (2009) Peer-reviewed Article 2010 ftjafricanj 2010-07-04T00:30:58Z The occurrence o zoonoic helminths in house rats (Rattus rattus) constitute serious public healthrisks as these rats commonly cohabit with humans, and are known to be natural reservoirs of somehelminth inections of public health importance. This study surveyed the prevalence of the three major zoonotic helminths (Capillaria hepatica, Hymenolepis spp and Trichinella spiralis) in house rats in Nsukka, Eastern Ngeria. A total of 103 house rats were trapped and screened for the three zoonotic helminths. Whole liver of each R. rattus was sectioned into smallbits and examined for the presence of C. hepatica nodules/granuloma, while faecal samples collected from the rectum othe trapped rats were screened for worm eggs by the simple floatation technique, and diaphragmatic muscle sections were examined microscopically for the presence of T. spiralis larvae. Results showed that out of the 103 rats screened, 5.8% were infected with C. hepatca, 19.5% with Hymenolepis spp, and none (0%) with T. spiralis. The prevaence of C. hepatca in reaton to sex and age of the rats was found to be 29% for maes 7.4% for females, 0% for young rats and7.8% for adult rats, while that o Hymenolepis spp in relation to sex and age of R. rattus was 20%or males, 16.2% for females, 0% for young rats and 23.4% for adults. The prevalence obtanedin this study was compared with those reported in literature for other locations The occurrence of C.hepatica and Hymenolepis spp in R. rattus surveyed was considered to be of immense public healthsignificance because of the detrimental pathologies the helminths cause in humans who easily get infected as the rats cohabit the homes/houses where humans live.Keywords: Prevalence, Zoonotic helminths, Capillaria hepatica, Hymenolepis spp, Trichinella spiralis, Rattus rattus Article in Journal/Newspaper Rattus rattus AJOL - African Journals Online
institution Open Polar
collection AJOL - African Journals Online
op_collection_id ftjafricanj
language English
description The occurrence o zoonoic helminths in house rats (Rattus rattus) constitute serious public healthrisks as these rats commonly cohabit with humans, and are known to be natural reservoirs of somehelminth inections of public health importance. This study surveyed the prevalence of the three major zoonotic helminths (Capillaria hepatica, Hymenolepis spp and Trichinella spiralis) in house rats in Nsukka, Eastern Ngeria. A total of 103 house rats were trapped and screened for the three zoonotic helminths. Whole liver of each R. rattus was sectioned into smallbits and examined for the presence of C. hepatica nodules/granuloma, while faecal samples collected from the rectum othe trapped rats were screened for worm eggs by the simple floatation technique, and diaphragmatic muscle sections were examined microscopically for the presence of T. spiralis larvae. Results showed that out of the 103 rats screened, 5.8% were infected with C. hepatca, 19.5% with Hymenolepis spp, and none (0%) with T. spiralis. The prevaence of C. hepatca in reaton to sex and age of the rats was found to be 29% for maes 7.4% for females, 0% for young rats and7.8% for adult rats, while that o Hymenolepis spp in relation to sex and age of R. rattus was 20%or males, 16.2% for females, 0% for young rats and 23.4% for adults. The prevalence obtanedin this study was compared with those reported in literature for other locations The occurrence of C.hepatica and Hymenolepis spp in R. rattus surveyed was considered to be of immense public healthsignificance because of the detrimental pathologies the helminths cause in humans who easily get infected as the rats cohabit the homes/houses where humans live.Keywords: Prevalence, Zoonotic helminths, Capillaria hepatica, Hymenolepis spp, Trichinella spiralis, Rattus rattus
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author IF Onyenwe
JI Ihedioha
RI Ezeme
spellingShingle IF Onyenwe
JI Ihedioha
RI Ezeme
Prevalence of zoonotic helminths in local house rats (Rattus rattus) in Nsukka, Eastern Nigeria
author_facet IF Onyenwe
JI Ihedioha
RI Ezeme
author_sort IF Onyenwe
title Prevalence of zoonotic helminths in local house rats (Rattus rattus) in Nsukka, Eastern Nigeria
title_short Prevalence of zoonotic helminths in local house rats (Rattus rattus) in Nsukka, Eastern Nigeria
title_full Prevalence of zoonotic helminths in local house rats (Rattus rattus) in Nsukka, Eastern Nigeria
title_fullStr Prevalence of zoonotic helminths in local house rats (Rattus rattus) in Nsukka, Eastern Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Prevalence of zoonotic helminths in local house rats (Rattus rattus) in Nsukka, Eastern Nigeria
title_sort prevalence of zoonotic helminths in local house rats (rattus rattus) in nsukka, eastern nigeria
publisher Animal Research International
publishDate 2010
url http://ajol.info/index.php/ari/article/view/55977
genre Rattus rattus
genre_facet Rattus rattus
op_source Animal Research International; Vol 6, No 3 (2009)
op_relation http://ajol.info/index.php/ari/article/view/55977
op_rights Copyright is owned by the journal
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