Danuta Cielecka
Medical University of Warsaw
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Acta Parasitologica | 2013
Rusłan Sałamatin; Tamara Pavlikovska; Olga Sagach; Svitlana Nikolayenko; Vadim V. Kornyushin; Vitaliy O. Kharchenko; Aleksander Masny; Danuta Cielecka; Joanna Konieczna-Sałamatin; David Bruce Conn; Elzbieta Golab
The filarial nematode Dirofilaria repens is currently considered to be one of the most extensively spreading human and animal parasites in Europe. In Ukraine, reporting cases of dirofilariasis has been mandatory since 1975, and the disease was included in the national surveillance system for notifiable diseases. Up until December 31st 2012, a total of 1533 cases have been registered, with 1465 cases occurring within the previous 16 years. Most of the cases of dirofilariasis were registered in 6 regions: Kyiv, and the Donetsk, Zaporizhzhya, Dnipropetrovsk, Kherson and Chernihiv oblasts. In the years 1997–2002 the highest incidence rate was noted in the Kherson oblast in the south of the country (9.79 per 100 000 people), and the lowest in western Ukraine (0.07–1.68 per 100 000 people). D. repens infections were registered in all oblasts. Parasitic lesions were most often located in the head, the subconjunctival tissue and around the eyes. D. repens lesions were also found in the limbs, torso, male sexual organs, and female mammary glands. Dirofilariasis was diagnosed in persons aged from 11 months to 90 years old, most often among people between 21–40 years of age. Most patients had only one parasitic skin lesion; the majority of isolated nematodes were female. The results of our analysis point to a constant increase in D. repens dirofilariasis incidence in humans in Ukraine. Despite educational efforts, infections have become more frequent and the territory in which the disease occurs has enlarged to encompass the whole of Ukraine. Nevertheless, the Ukrainian sanitary-epidemiological services managed to achieve some measure of success, e.g. by creating a registration system for D. repens infections and establishing proper diagnostics for the disease.
PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2013
Wacław Nahorski; Józef Piotr Knap; Z. Pawlowski; Marek Krawczyk; Jerzy A. Polański; Jerzy Stefaniak; Waldemar Patkowski; Beata Szostakowska; Halina Pietkiewicz; Anna Grzeszczuk; Iwona Felczak-Korzybska; Elżbieta Gołąb; Natalia Wnukowska; Małgorzata Paul; Elżbieta Kacprzak; Elżbieta Sokolewicz-Bobrowska; Aleksandra Czyrznikowska; Lidia Chomicz; Danuta Cielecka; Przemysław Myjak
Background Alveolar echinococcosis (AE) caused by Echinococcus multilocularis infections is a dangerous old disease in the Northern Hemisphere. The aim of the paper was to collect and analyze data on human AE in Poland in the last two decades. Methodology/Principal Findings The sources of data were both the cases officially registered and detected by an active field and laboratory surveillance. The cases were verified by clinical, epidemiological, and laboratory criteria. Altogether 121 human cases of AE were detected. Among these 83 (68,6%) cases were classified as confirmed, 16 as probable and 22 as possible. During the two decades a continuous increase in detection rate was noticed. The cases were 6–82 years old at the time of diagnosis (mean - 47.7 years). Sex ratio M/F was 0.86/1.0. The AE was fatal in 23 (19%) patients (mean age at death - 54.1 years). Family agglomeration of AE was found in 4 foci, involving 9 patients. Seventy six of the cases were diagnosed in an advanced stage of disease. In all cases the liver was the primary location of AE. In 30 (24.8%) patients a spread to other organs was observed. Ninety four of the patients were treated with albendazole. In 73 (60%) patients a surgical operation was performed, including 15 liver transplantations. Conclusions/Significance The studies confirmed that AE is an emerging disease in Poland, which is the fourth country in Europe with over 120 cases detected. The results also indicate the need of a wider national programme for implementation of screening in the highest AE risk areas (north-eastern Poland) with an effort to increase the public awareness of the possibility of contracting E. multilocularis, and above all, training of the primary care physicians in the recognition of the risk of AE to allow for an early detection of this dangerous disease.
Parasites & Vectors | 2013
Aleksander Masny; Elżbieta Gołąb; Danuta Cielecka; Rusłan Sałamatin
Comments on the article “Vector-borne helminths of dogs and humans in Europe” published in Parasites and Vectors 2013, 6:16.
Infectious Agents and Cancer | 2015
Piotr Karol Borkowski; Grzegorz Rymkiewicz; Joanna Gołębiewska; Nestor Nestoros; Joanna Romejko-Jarosinska; Hanna Zarnowska-Prymek; Aleksander Masny; Jakub Palucki; Danuta Cielecka
The first case of human dirofilarosis in Poland was recorded in 2007. Until that time our country was free of Dirofilaria repens. Recent studies show that 21,4- 60% of dogs in Warsaw region harbour microfilariae, therefore it is becoming a growing problem in Central Europe.In April 2013 a subconjunctival D. repens was removed from the eye of 61-year-old woman. It was the twenty first case of this disease in Poland, the third case of eye dirofilaria and the fourth autochtonous case. The patient had never been abroad, so it was the first case of autochtonous human ocular dirofilariosis in Poland. Nine months after the D. repens had been removed, a MALT lymphoma was discovered. In the article we discuss whether a MALT lymphoma of the lacrimal gland of the eye, previously affected by the parasite, may be the consequence of the invasion.
Central European Journal of Biology | 2016
V. Šnábel; Tetiana A. Kuzmina; Serena Cavallero; Stefano D’Amelio; Stefan Octavian Georgescu; Zsuzsanna Szénási; Danuta Cielecka; Rusłan Sałamatin; Alexander Yemets; István Kucsera
Abstract Central-eastern Europe is an endemic region for cystic echinococcosis where multiple species of intermediate hosts are commonly infected with Echinococcus granulosus sensu lato tapeworms of major medical and veterinary importance. Investigations of the genetic variation of 25 Echinococcus isolates from five countries (Slovakia, Romania, Ukraine, Hungary, Poland) were undertaken using three mitochondrial DNA markers. The 18 isolates from pigs derived from Slovakia and Ukraine and the four human isolates from Slovakia, Poland and Ukraine were identified as E. canadensis G 7, whereas the three human isolates from Romania and Hungary were classified as E. granulosus sensu stricto G1. This study reports the first confirmed human case of E. granulosus s.s. in Hungary. The haplotype G7A with two polymorphic sites relative to the most common regional variant of E. canadensis G7 was recorded in both pigs from Ukraine and in a single pig isolate from Slovakia. The results of this study support the circumstantial evidence that E. canadensis G7 with low infectivity for humans is highly prevalent in the northern parts of the region (Poland, Slovakia, forest-steppe zone of Ukraine), while infections with E. granulosus s.s. which are highly infectious for humans are more commonly encountered in Romania and Hungary.
Parasitology Research | 2017
Rusłan Sałamatin; Jerzy Kowal; P. Nosal; Sławomir Kornaś; Danuta Cielecka; Dawid Jańczak; Waldemar Patkowski; Jakub Gawor; Vadim V. Kornyushin; Elzbieta Golab; V. Šnábel
Cystic echinococcosis is one of the most important zoonotic diseases affecting humans and livestock worldwide, and is endemic in Poland. A set of six isolates on larval stages of Echinococcus granulosus sensu lato tapeworms collected from three humans, two pigs and one sheep from Polish foci of CE was examined by DNA sequencing of two mitochondrial genes (cox1, rrnS). The results demonstrated the presence of E. canadensis and E. granulosus sensu stricto in the investigated hydatid cysts. The former species was found in all five isolates from pigs and humans derived from central Poland. In a sheep hydatid cyst originating from Lesser Poland Voivodeship in southern Poland, E. granulosus s. s. (G1 genotype) was identified. This is the first report of an unambiguously autochthonous infection with E. granulosus s. s. in Poland. The global distribution and host affiliations of the commonly occurring G1 microvariant with nucleotide change 56C/T in cox1, detected here in Polish sheep, are discussed. The finding that sheep harboured E. granulosus s. s. may have important consequences for developing effective hydatid control programmes in Poland due to its longer maturation rate in dogs compared with E. canadensis G7. This may lead to greater expenditures for purchasing anthelmintics to provide an appropriate dosing regime in sheep-raising areas of the country.
Archive | 2014
Rusłan Sałamatin; Tamara Pavlikovska; Olga Sagach; Svitlana Nikolayenko; Vadim V. Kornyushin; Vitaliy A. Kharchenko; Aleksander Masny; Danuta Cielecka; Joanna Konieczna-Sałamatin; David Bruce Conn; Elzbieta Golab
BACKGROUND: In Ukraine, dirofilariasis has been known for a long time. The first case of human D. repens infection was noted in 1927; 16 cases were described in the literature through 1974. From 1975 the cases of human dirofilariasis have been a subject of mandatory epidemiological registration in Ukraine and are recorded in the state register that covers the entire country (Sałamatin et al. 2013; Acta Parasitologica 58(4): 592–598). 24%
Acta Parasitologica | 2011
Danuta Cielecka; Rusłan Sałamatin; Jiljí Sitko; Vadim V. Kornyushin; Teresa Sulgostowska
Specimens previously identified as Fimbriaria fasciolaris or Fimbriaria sp. from Poland, Ukraine and the Czech Republic were re-examined. The revision revealed Fimbriaria czaplinskii from naturally-infected Anas platyrhynchos dom., Anas acuta and Aythya fuligula (new host records) in Poland, Tadorna tadorna from the Black Sea coast and Aythya ferina from the coast of the Sea of Azov, Ukraine (new host records), Anas platyrhynchos, Aythya fuligula and Aythya ferina (the latter two being new host records) from Moravia, Czech Republic (new geographical record). The diagnostic characters of F. czaplinskii are commented and updated from an original erroneous description. The most reliable distinguishing character is the structure of the copulatory part of the vagina, which is funnel-shaped and usually has smooth internal surface. The characters associated with the cirrus size and armament and the number of genital primordia per segment are not considered reliable differentiating characters. A lectotype and paralectotypes of F. czaplinskii are designated.
Annals of Agricultural and Environmental Medicine | 2012
Danuta Cielecka; Hanna Żarnowska-Prymek; Aleksander Masny; Rusłan Sałamatin; Maria Wesołowska; Elżbieta Gołąb
Acta Parasitologica | 1994
Danuta Cielecka; Barbara Grytner Ziecina; Lidia Chomicz