Monday, 30 June 2014

How ancient parasite wormed its way into human life



Scientists extricate a skeleton at a dig in northern Syria in 2010, in this image released Thursday. The skeleton, more than 6,200 years old, displays the earliest known evidence of infection with a parasitic worm that now afflicts more than 200 million people worldwide. | AP


LONDON/PARIS – In a skeleton more than 6,200 years old, scientists have found the earliest known evidence of infection by a parasitic flatworm, revealing how human advancement enabled a creature resembling a tiny slug to spread. Today it afflicts more than 200 million people.

Archaeologists discovered the egg of the parasite near the pelvis of a child’s skeleton in northern Syria and say it dates back to a time when ancient societies first used irrigation systems to grow crops.

Scientists suspect the new farming technique meant people were spending a lot of time wading in warm water — ideal conditions for the parasites to jump into humans. That may have triggered outbreaks of the waterborne flatworm disease known as schistosomiasis.

In a letter published by the journal The Lancet Infectious Diseases, a team of archaeologists and biologists said they had found a 6,200-year-old egg of the feared parasite in an ancient grave in northern Syria.

The site, Tell Zeidan, is in the valley of the Euphrates, part of the fabled Fertile Crescent, where humans settled down to farm nearly 8,000 years ago, making the historic leap from hunter-gatherers.

The team excavated the skeletal remains of 26 people from the burial site and gently sifted through sediment collected from their pelvic areas. The painstaking work turned up an egg just 132 thousandths of a millimeter long that under a powerful microscope turned out to be pale brown, stained by millennia-long exposure to the soil.

The egg, say the researchers, is from one of two species of schistosomes — flatworms that cause bilharzia, which affects hundreds of millions of people in tropical Asia, Africa and Latin America.

Schistosomes burrow into the skin when someone wades into freshwater, and develop into adult worms before invading the kidney and bladder or intestines. Luxuriating in the balmy flow of blood, they mate, and their eggs are excreted in urine or feces, thus exposing more people to the disease, which is also called schistosomiasis or snail fever.

Infection, typically signaled by blood in the urine, can result in kidney failure, bladder cancer, malnutrition and anemia.

Recent DNA analysis of schistosomes suggest the flatworm evolved in Asia and spread from there to Africa and beyond. But how this happened was unclear until now.

Migration through early human settlement in the Middle East, via the irrigation system of the Fertile Crescent, is a likely answer, the letter says.

The people at Tell Zeidan grew wheat and barley in highly arid conditions, which suggests they developed an irrigation system to water their crops. If so, wading in the water channels would have been the likely infection source for the individual who carried the parasite, according to the probe headed by Piers Mitchell at Britain’s University of Cambridge.

“Our findings suggest that crop irrigation 6,000 years ago in the Middle East enabled schistosomiasis to spread to people living there, and so triggered the enormous disease burden that schistosomiasis has caused over the past 6,000 years,” the letter says.

The World Health Organization says more than 42 million people were treated for bilharzia in 2012, and 249 million were given preventive treatment with praziquantel, the front-line drug for controlling the parasite.

The latest discovery also fits with other pieces of evidence.

They include the remains found at many ancient Middle East sites of freshwater Bulinus snails that provide a host for the parasite at an early stage of its life cycle, as well as an ancient medical text found in modern-day north Iraq whose author described diseases that caused blood-stained urine.

And in 2002, schistosomes were found in Egyptian mummies — evidence that the wretched parasite was a problem for the people living and working along the Nile 5,200 years ago.

Infection through irrigation could be the earliest known example of human technology enabling a disease to spread. The health consequences probably had “a significant impact upon early civilizations in the region,” said Mitchell.

Source: http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2014/06/20/world/science-health-world/how-ancient-parasite-wormed-its-way-into-human-life/#.U7GleqjoSDo

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