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Trichuris trichiura in a post-Colonial Brazilian mummy

Abstract

Trichuris trichiura is a soil-transmitted helminth which is prevalent in warm, moist, tropical and subtropical regions of the world with poor sanitation. Heavy whipworm can result either in Trichuris dysenteric syndrome - especially in children - or in a chronic colitis. In heavy infections, worms can spread proximally and may cause ileitis. Here we provide first microscopic evidence for a T. trichiura adult worm embedded in the rectum of a post-Colonial Brazilian adult mummy. During Colonial and post-Colonial times, many European chroniclers described a parasitic disease named Maculo whose symptomatology coincides with heavy helminthiasis. Based on our findings and on comparison of ancient textual evidence with modern description of heavy whipworm, we feel confident in considering that the two syndromes are expressions of the same pathological condition.

whipworm; soil-transmitted helminthiasis; Maculo syndrome


Trichuris trichiura is a soil-transmitted helminth which is prevalent in warm, moist, tropical and subtropical regions of the world with poor sanitation (e.g., Sub-Saharan Africa, India, China, a large part of Asia, Latin America and Caribbean and Middle Eastern Crescent) (Azira & Zeehaida 2012Azira NMS, Zeehaida M 2012. Severe chronic iron deficiency anemia secondary to Trichuris dysentery syndrome - a case report. Trop Biomed 29: 626-631.). The infection is acquired by ingestion of contaminated water or foods and is mostly asymptomatic. However, when it progresses from light to heavy infection, specific diseases manifest.

Heavy whipworm infection may cause the insurgence of the so-calledTrichuris dysenteric syndrome (TDS) especially in young children; TDS is characterised by mucoid diarrhoea, rectal bleeding and rectal prolapse complicated with severe bacterial secondary infection (Cooper et al. 1992Cooper ES, Whyte-Alleng CAM, Finzi-Smith JS, McDonald TT 1992. Intestinal nematode infections in children:the patho-phisyological price paid. Parasitology 104: 91-103.). In adults, heavy trichuriasis can result either in TDS or in a chronic colitis that shares many clinical features with other bowel diseases such as Crohn disease or ulcerative colitis; in heavy infections, worms can also spread proximally and may cause ileitis (Long et al. 2012Long SS, Pickering LK, Proberc CG 2012. Principles and practice of pediatric infectious diseases, 4th ed., Elsevier, New York, 1744 pp.).

Here we report on a case of T. trichiura adult worm infection in a late XVIII-early XIX century naturally mummified body (mummy A74, adult male) unearthed from the topsoil of Itacambira's church [state of Minas Gerais (MG), Brazil].

A previous study carried out on a coprolite from mummy A74 had already revealed the presence of few T. trichiura eggs in its faeces although the exact burden of the infection could not be established due to the eggs' poor state of preservation (Confalonieri et al. 1981Confalonieri U, Araujo A, Ferreira LF 1981. Trichuris trichiura infection in Colonial Brazil. Paleopathol Newsl 35: 13-14.). Recently, paleoparasitological investigations were further expanded.

Biopsies were taken from rectum of the mummy A74 and subjected to histological investigations. A longitudinal fragment of 8 cm of the rectum wall was sampled. After rehydration in Sandison solution for five days, samples were fixed for 24 h in 10% buffered formalin, dehydrated and embedded in paraffin blocks. The cuts were made in 3 µm thick sections. The paraffin sections were histochemically counterstained with haematoxylin and eosin stain.

Light microscopy showed in the tissue of the rectal wall the presence of five peculiar round structures, which ranged from 42.6 μm in length to 56.4 μm in breadth, embedded in mummy A74's rectal tissue (B in Figure). Through scanning electron microscopy, these structures were identified as transversal cuts of the anterior region of a T. trichiura adult worm (E, F in FigureAzira NMS, Zeehaida M 2012. Severe chronic iron deficiency anemia secondary to Trichuris dysentery syndrome - a case report. Trop Biomed 29: 626-631.). The spacing between these structures was 48 µm, thus suggesting that these were different sections of a single worm. The diagnosis was achieved by comparing the cuticular structures seen in the mummy biopsy with those observed in mice experimentally infected with Trichuris muris (A, C, D in FigureAzira NMS, Zeehaida M 2012. Severe chronic iron deficiency anemia secondary to Trichuris dysentery syndrome - a case report. Trop Biomed 29: 626-631.).


Upper row: light microscopy of histological section. A: anterior region of Trichuris muris inserted in the large intestine of modern laboratory mouse, showing the bacillary band region (Bb) on the nematode cuticle (Cu) as comparison for archaeological material; B: anterior region ofTrichuris trichiura inserted in the terminal portion of the rectum of human mummified tissue under study, showing the typical cuticular surface with the Bb. Lower row: scanning electron microscopy of histological section; C: anterior region of T. muris inserted in the large intestine of modern laboratory mouse, showing the Bb; D: detail of the Cu and host tissue, forming a epithelial tunnel (Ti) Bb on the nematode Cu; E: anterior region ofT. trichiura inserted in the terminal portion of large human mummified intestinal tissue, showing the Cu with adjacent secondary Bb; F: T. trichiura Cu and host tissue (Ti).

Adult T. trichiura worms introduce their anterior region in the intestinal mucosa, mainly in the caecum where they prevalently reside. However, during severe T. trichiura infections, worms colonise the entire gross intestine down to the rectal region where they cause tissue damage, oedema and secondary bacterial invasion (Gilman et al. 1976Gilman RH, Davis C, Fitzgerald F 1976. Heavy Trichuris infection and amoebic dysentery in Orang Asli children. A comparison of the two diseases. Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg 70: 313-316., Stephenson et al. 2000Stephenson LS, Holland CV, Cooper ES 2000. The public health significance of Trichuris trichiura. Parasitology 121 (Suppl.): S73-S95.).

The presence of a single T. trichiura adult worm embedded in the rectum of individual A74 is consistent with a heavy whipworm infection. It is reasonable to hypothesize that a higher number of adult worms might have been originally present in individual A74's rectum at the time of his death; however, poor overall preservation conditions of the corpse prevented us from identification of further worms.

Previous recovery of coprolites in mummy A74 (Confalonieri et al. 1981Confalonieri U, Araujo A, Ferreira LF 1981. Trichuris trichiura infection in Colonial Brazil. Paleopathol Newsl 35: 13-14.) is inconsistent with a TDS diagnosis; it is consistent, instead, with chronic colitis (Long et al. 2012Long SS, Pickering LK, Proberc CG 2012. Principles and practice of pediatric infectious diseases, 4th ed., Elsevier, New York, 1744 pp.) whose long-term effects on the health conditions of this man remain unknown.

As a matter of fact, mummy A74 dates back to the time of gold and diamond expeditions in the most remote areas of Brazil (e.g., MG). Both nutritional and sanitary conditions among the people who partook these expeditions were extremely poor and people were, therefore, exposed to several infections caused by different parasites.

Whereas T. trichiura eggs have been abundantly found in coprolites of ancient individuals from all continents dating both to prehistoric and historic periods (Gonçalves et al. 2003Gonçalves MLC, Araújo A, Ferreira LF 2003. Human intestinal parasites in the past:new findings and a review. Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz 98 (Suppl. I): 103-118., Reinhard et al. 2008Reinhard KJ, Araújo A, Sianto L, Costello JG, Swope K 2008. Chinese liver flukes in latrine sediments from Wong Nim's property, San Bernardino, California:archaeoparasitology of the Caltrans district seadquarters. J Parasitol 94: 300-303., Jiménez et al. 2012Jiménez FA, Gardner SL, Araújo A, Fugassa M, Brooks RH, Racz E, Reinhard KJ 2012. Zoonotic and human parasites of inhabitants of Cueva de Los Muertos Chiquitos, Rio Zape Valley, Durango, México. J Parasitol 98: 304-309., Morrow et al. 2014Morrow JJ, Larsen AS, Jankauskas R, Kozakaitė J, Piombino-Mascali D, Araújo A, Reinhard KJ 2014. Taphonomic considerations of a whipworm infection in a mummy from the Dominican Church of the Holy Spirit, Vilnius, Lithuania. Int J Paleopathol 7: 83-87., Rácz et al. 2015Rácz SE, de Araújo EP, Jensen E, Mostek C, Morrow JJ, Van Hove ML, Bianucci R, Willems D, Heller F, Araújo A, Reinhard KJ 2015. Parasitology in an archaeological context:analysis of medieval burials in Nivelles, Belgium. J Archaeol Sci 53: 304-315.), the presence of T. trichiura adult worms in mummies has never been reported in paleoparasitological literature.

During Colonial and post-Colonial periods, many European chroniclers described a parasitic disease named Maculo or Mal del Culo(disease of the anus) or doença do bicho (disease of the bug); this disease was characterised by "rectal inflammation, fetid mucous elimination, ulcerations and bloody diarrhoea" accompanied, sometimes, by rectal prolapse (Sigaud 1844Sigaud JFX 1844. Du climat et des maladies du Brésil ou statistique médicale de cet Empire, Masson & Cie Libraires, Paris, 591 pp.).

First descriptions of the disease and of a tentative treatment (a mixture of pepper powder, crushed with tobacco, gunpowder and other herbs, introduced through the anus by an enema or applied externally) were given between the end of the XVI century [de Sousa (1851)de Abreu A 1623. Tratado de las siete enfermedades: de la inflammacion universal del higado, zirbo, pyloron y riñones, y de la obstrucion, de la satiriasi, de la terciana y febre maligna, y passion hipocondriaca: leua otros tres Tratados, del mal de Loanda, del Guzano, y de las Fuentes y Sedales, Pedro Craesbeek Impressor del Rey, Lisboa, 509 pp. , written in 1587] and the first half of the XVII century AD (de Abreu 1623de Abreu A 1623. Tratado de las siete enfermedades: de la inflammacion universal del higado, zirbo, pyloron y riñones, y de la obstrucion, de la satiriasi, de la terciana y febre maligna, y passion hipocondriaca: leua otros tres Tratados, del mal de Loanda, del Guzano, y de las Fuentes y Sedales, Pedro Craesbeek Impressor del Rey, Lisboa, 509 pp., Piso 1648Piso W 1648. Historia Naturalis Brasilae, Elsevier, Amsterdam, 442 pp.).

The Maculo syndrome, which was enhanced by poor nutrition and unsanitary conditions, is claimed to have caused hundreds of deaths in Colonial and post-Colonial Brazil (Rezende 2003Rezende J 2003. Maculo e sua variada sinonímia. Rev Patol Trop 32: 131-135.). Based on our findings and on comparison of ancient textual evidence with modern description of TDS, we feel confident in considering the two syndromes as the expressions of the same pathological condition.

REFERENCES

  • Azira NMS, Zeehaida M 2012. Severe chronic iron deficiency anemia secondary to Trichuris dysentery syndrome - a case report. Trop Biomed 29: 626-631.
  • Confalonieri U, Araujo A, Ferreira LF 1981. Trichuris trichiura infection in Colonial Brazil. Paleopathol Newsl 35: 13-14.
  • Cooper ES, Whyte-Alleng CAM, Finzi-Smith JS, McDonald TT 1992. Intestinal nematode infections in children:the patho-phisyological price paid. Parasitology 104: 91-103.
  • de Abreu A 1623. Tratado de las siete enfermedades: de la inflammacion universal del higado, zirbo, pyloron y riñones, y de la obstrucion, de la satiriasi, de la terciana y febre maligna, y passion hipocondriaca: leua otros tres Tratados, del mal de Loanda, del Guzano, y de las Fuentes y Sedales, Pedro Craesbeek Impressor del Rey, Lisboa, 509 pp.
  • de Sousa G 1851. Tratado descritivo do Brasil em 1587, Laemmert, Rio de Janeiro, 423 pp.
  • Gilman RH, Davis C, Fitzgerald F 1976. Heavy Trichuris infection and amoebic dysentery in Orang Asli children. A comparison of the two diseases. Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg 70: 313-316.
  • Gonçalves MLC, Araújo A, Ferreira LF 2003. Human intestinal parasites in the past:new findings and a review. Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz 98 (Suppl. I): 103-118.
  • Jiménez FA, Gardner SL, Araújo A, Fugassa M, Brooks RH, Racz E, Reinhard KJ 2012. Zoonotic and human parasites of inhabitants of Cueva de Los Muertos Chiquitos, Rio Zape Valley, Durango, México. J Parasitol 98: 304-309.
  • Long SS, Pickering LK, Proberc CG 2012. Principles and practice of pediatric infectious diseases, 4th ed., Elsevier, New York, 1744 pp.
  • Morrow JJ, Larsen AS, Jankauskas R, Kozakaitė J, Piombino-Mascali D, Araújo A, Reinhard KJ 2014. Taphonomic considerations of a whipworm infection in a mummy from the Dominican Church of the Holy Spirit, Vilnius, Lithuania. Int J Paleopathol 7: 83-87.
  • Piso W 1648. Historia Naturalis Brasilae, Elsevier, Amsterdam, 442 pp.
  • Rácz SE, de Araújo EP, Jensen E, Mostek C, Morrow JJ, Van Hove ML, Bianucci R, Willems D, Heller F, Araújo A, Reinhard KJ 2015. Parasitology in an archaeological context:analysis of medieval burials in Nivelles, Belgium. J Archaeol Sci 53: 304-315.
  • Reinhard KJ, Araújo A, Sianto L, Costello JG, Swope K 2008. Chinese liver flukes in latrine sediments from Wong Nim's property, San Bernardino, California:archaeoparasitology of the Caltrans district seadquarters. J Parasitol 94: 300-303.
  • Rezende J 2003. Maculo e sua variada sinonímia. Rev Patol Trop 32: 131-135.
  • Sigaud JFX 1844. Du climat et des maladies du Brésil ou statistique médicale de cet Empire, Masson & Cie Libraires, Paris, 591 pp.
  • Stephenson LS, Holland CV, Cooper ES 2000. The public health significance of Trichuris trichiura. Parasitology 121 (Suppl.): S73-S95.
  • Financial support: CNPq (301154/2011-2), FAPERJ (E-26102.735/2012), CAPES (Ciência sem Fronteiras, 049/2012)
  • ERRATUM

    Vol. 110 (1): 145-147, 2015.
    p. 145
    Rafaella Bianucci1,2,3/+, Eduardo J Lopes Torres4,5, Juliana MF Dutra Santiago6, Luis F Ferreira6, Andreas G Nerlich7, Sheila Maria Mendonça de Souza6, Valentina Giuffra8, Pedro Paulo Chieffi9, Otilio Maria Bastos10, Renata Travassos5,11, Wanderley de Souza5,11, Adauto Araújo6
    should read:
    Raffaella Bianucci1,2,3/+, Eduardo J Lopes Torres4,5, Juliana MF Dutra Santiago6, Luiz Fernando Ferreira6, Andreas G Nerlich7, Sheila Maria Mendonça de Souza6, Valentina Giuffra8, Pedro Paulo Chieffi9, Otilio Machado Bastos10, Renata Travassos5,11, Wanderley de Souza5,11, Adauto Araújo6

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    23 Jan 2015
  • Date of issue
    Feb 2015

History

  • Received
    07 Oct 2014
  • Accepted
    16 Dec 2014
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