In the present study, different fly species were associated with foodborne and other pathogens. Wild synanthropic flies belonging to 12 species of 12 genera were caught for the isolation and identification of microorganisms, which might have been possibly transmitted by these flies. Trapping of flies was done at different domestic animal related places (dog pound, poultry house, cattle barn, horse stable, pigpen). All 56 individual flies were shown to be carriers of multiple species of microorganisms. Furthermore, the capacity for the flies to act as vectors was demonstrated by successful transfer of the microorganisms from live flies to blood agar plates. Potentially pathogenic and several non-pathogenic microorganisms were found. Among them, a series of pathogenic Escherichia coli strains (EAEC, EPEC, ETEC) was identified. This is the first study to clearly demonstrate the potential of these flies as vectors for the transmission of pathogenic microorganisms.
In the current study, samples of 50 synanthropic flies were collected from each of five rural locations used for domestic animal husbandry (specifically a cattle barn, a dog pound, a horse stable, and a pigpen). Flies were examined using a variety of microbiological methods to determine the pathogenic agents that they carried. The most frequently sampled species were Musca domestica (L.) (51%) followed by Stomoxys calcitrans (L.) (24%). All fly species were found to carry an array of different pathogenic bacterial and fungal species. Among these were human pathogens such as Campylobacter jejuni and Escherichia coli-strains (EHEC, EPEC, and ETEC) and the fungi Candida albicans and Candida tropicalis. The germs could be detected in the intestines as well as on the exoskeletons of the flies. The current study confirms and supplements the general knowledge about pathogens that may be transmitted to domestic animals and humans by synanthropic flies.
Sera from 118 women of 33 to over 90 years of age, with or without a history of cervical squamous-cell carcinoma, were examined for the presence of antibodies to HPV-6b, HPV-16 and HPV-18, L1, L2, E4, and E7 gene products by the use of bacterially derived beta-Gal fusion proteins and Western-blot analysis. Among the cervical cancer patients, 29/46 (63.0%) were positive for antibodies to E4 and/or E7 of HPV-16 and/or E7 of HPV-18. In contrast, only 2 of 31 (6.5%) non-genital cancer patients and 4 of 41 (9.8%) healthy individuals were antibody-positive for HPV-16 E4 or E7, while antibodies to the homologous proteins of HPV-18 could not be detected. Prevalence rates of antibodies to the HPV-16/18 late proteins were 25/46 (54.3%) in the cervical carcinoma group, 13/31 (41.9%) among women with non-genital cancer types, and 18/41 (43.9%) among normal, healthy individuals. Antibodies to HPV-6b late gene products ranged between 6.5% and 12.2% in the different patient groups. Antibodies to HPV-6b E4 and E7 were detected only once. By studying an additional control group of 207 women with a different age distribution, age-dependence of antibodies to HPV gene products could be ruled out. Whereas antibodies to late proteins may indicate that, regardless of clinical stage, HPV infections are wide-spread among the female population, the striking difference between the prevalence rates of antibodies to early proteins of HPV-16 and HPV-18 among cervical cancer patients and controls (p less than 0.001) supports the idea of the involvement of these virus types in carcinogenesis of the cervix.
Hay mixed with manure and urine residues at sites where hay has been provided as supplemental winter feed for cattle provide an excellent substrate for the development of immature stable flies, Stomoxys calcitrans (L.). Such sites are primary sources of early summer stable flies in the central United States and no effective measures are currently available to control fly development in them. A single application of granular cyromazine in May provided 97% reduction in the number of adult stable flies emerging from hay feeding sites. Stable fly control did not decline during the 12 wk season. A small decline in control was observed relative to anthomyiid, sarcophagid, and syrphid flies developing in the hay feeding sites. However, none of those flies are considered to be pests and > or = 50% control of those flies was maintained for 65 d after application. Cyromazine offers a safe and affordable option for the control of immature stable flies developing in winter hay feeding sites. Controlling those flies should reduce the estimated $2 billion per year of lost production in U.S. cattle industries attributable to stable flies.
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