01900nas a2200193 4500000000100000008004100001260001900042653002100061653002200082653001100104100001600115700001500131245011400146856006300260300000800323490000600331520134400337022002501681 2025 d c11/2025bWiley10aSchistosomiasis 10aZoonotic diseases10aAfrica1 aFordjour FA1 aKwarteng A00aZoonotic Schistosomiasis: The Crossroads Between Animal and Human Schistosomiasis in Africa: Narrative Review uhttps://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/hsr2.71555 a1-80 v83 a
Background
The fight against schistosomiasis (urogenital and intestinal) has prolonged more than expected with more areas that were previously known to have less or no incidence of infection now recording alarming incidence rate. Researchers and stakeholders are now concerned about what is probably sustaining the possible infection, and one of the leading hypotheses is the zoonotic forms of the species playing a major role.
Aim
In Africa, livestock and their owners stay in proximity, thereby bringing together both human and livestock schistosomes. Schistosoma haematobium (human) and Schistosoma bovis (livestock) have the same snail host and can result in hybridization during the sexual phase of the parasite development in the mammalian host. These genetic spillovers lead to hybrid formation of schistosomes which can be problematic for diagnosis, treatment, and control programs.
Conclusion
Although there is less data on the ability of hybrid to cause resistance on praziquantel, experts suggest a possibility. This review calls for researchers, experts, and stakeholders to come together to provide empirical data on this menace especially on the prevailing Schistosoma species in livestock on the African continent.
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