2018
DOI: 10.1111/tmi.13076
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Soil‐transmitted helminth infections associated with wastewater and sludge reuse: a review of current evidence

Abstract: ObjectiveTo review current evidence on infections related to the concentration of soil‐transmitted helminth (STH) eggs in wastewater, sludge and vegetables irrigated with wastewater or grown on sludge‐amended soils.MethodSearch of Web of Science, Science Direct, PubMed and Google Scholar databases for publications reporting on STH egg concentration in wastewater, sludge and vegetables and for epidemiological studies on wastewater/sludge reuse and STH infections.Results STH egg concentrations were variable but … Show more

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Cited by 44 publications
(34 citation statements)
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References 95 publications
(74 reference statements)
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“…Therefore, a 2-log inactivation may be sufficient to inactivate all cercariae. This is unlike wastewater treatment where helminth eggs are found in much higher concentrations and therefore require higher log inactivations [40]. For example, water with a concentration of less than 1 cercaria/ 100L (as found in the field on St Lucia [41]) would enable the safe treatment of up to 10,000L, as this volume would contain less than 100 cercariae.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore, a 2-log inactivation may be sufficient to inactivate all cercariae. This is unlike wastewater treatment where helminth eggs are found in much higher concentrations and therefore require higher log inactivations [40]. For example, water with a concentration of less than 1 cercaria/ 100L (as found in the field on St Lucia [41]) would enable the safe treatment of up to 10,000L, as this volume would contain less than 100 cercariae.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The eggs lay by most nematodes that are parasitic in humans may include either the zygote, blastomere, or formed larva (Castro, 1996). The concentration of helminth eggs was high in wastewater and sludge, especially in developing countries (Amoah et al, 2018). The soil-transmitted helminth eggs relate to infection risk through different exposure routes.…”
Section: Classification Of Helminthsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…hand, foot and mouth disease, poliomyelitis, Bornholm disease, polio-like syndrome, pericarditis, myocarditis A total of 57,628 cases occurred with 3,145 deaths and 21,269 paralysed patients, in 1952, in the United States Zamula ( 1991 ) Vibrio cholerae Cholera A total of 1,041,422 cases occurred with 9642 deaths in 1991 in America Skowron et al ( 2018 ) Clostridia (mostly C. perfringens ) Type A food poisoning, necrotising enteritis, enterotoxaemias, bacteraemia, gas gangrene Widely distributed in the soil and in faeces of humans and animals, dominant cause of food poisoning in the USA and Canada Labbe and Juneja ( 2017 ), McClane ( 2014 ) Cryptococcus (mostly Cryptococcus neoformans ) Meningitis, meningoencephalitis or disseminated disease Major life-threatening fungal infection in patients with severe HIV infection, may complicate organ transplantation, reticuloendothelial malignancy, corticosteroid treatment or sarcoidosis Kaplan et al ( 2002 ) Roundworms (mostly Ascaris lumbricoides ) Helminthiasis (incl. soil-transmitted): ascariasis, necatoriasis, cestodiasis, also malnutrition, anaemia, and others Ascariasis classified as the most prevailing parasitic infection, about 1/5 of the world’s population affected Amoah et al ( 2018 ), Vieira Da Rocha et al ( 2016 ) Giardia ( G. lamblia ) Giardiasis, severe diarrhoea About 1/3 of the developing countries population affected, from 3 to 7% of people affected in the USA Auerbach ( 2011 ) …”
Section: The Mechanism Of the Electron Beam Irradiationmentioning
confidence: 99%