Could diet composition modulate pathological outcomes in schistosomiasis mansoni? A systematic review of in vivo preclinical evidence

Schistosomiasis and malnutrition are often overlapped in poor communities, resulting in disproportionately high mortality rates. Currently, fragmented data make it difficult to define the relationship between diet and schistosomiasis. Thus, we systematically review the preclinical evidence on the im...

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Veröffentlicht in:Parasitology 2018-08, Vol.145 (9), p.1127-1136
Hauptverfasser: Marques, Débora Vasconcelos Bastos, Felizardo, Amanda Aparecida, Souza, Raquel Lopes Martins, Pereira, Alessandro Antônio Costa, Gonçalves, Reggiani Vilela, Novaes, Rômulo Dias
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container_end_page 1136
container_issue 9
container_start_page 1127
container_title Parasitology
container_volume 145
creator Marques, Débora Vasconcelos Bastos
Felizardo, Amanda Aparecida
Souza, Raquel Lopes Martins
Pereira, Alessandro Antônio Costa
Gonçalves, Reggiani Vilela
Novaes, Rômulo Dias
description Schistosomiasis and malnutrition are often overlapped in poor communities, resulting in disproportionately high mortality rates. Currently, fragmented data make it difficult to define the relationship between diet and schistosomiasis. Thus, we systematically review the preclinical evidence on the impact of diet in Schistosoma mansoni infection. From a structured search, we recovered 27 original articles. All studies used mice and most of them investigated hypoproteic (70.37%), hyperlipidic (22.22%) or vitamin-deficient (7.41%) diets. Diets based on carbohydrate, zinc or milk supplementation were investigated at a reduced frequency (3.70% each). Hypoproteic diets attenuated parasitic load and granulomatous inflammation, but also reduced host resistance to S. mansoni infection, determining higher mortality rates. By stimulating steatohepatitis, parasitic load and granulomatous inflammation, hyperlipidic diets increase organ damage and mortality in infected animals. Although a high-sugar diet and vitamin restriction potentiate and zinc supplementation attenuates S. mansoni infection, the current evidence for these diets remains inconclusive. Analysis of methodological quality indicated that the current evidence is at high risk of bias due to incomplete characterization of the experimental design, diet composition and treatment protocols. From the bias analysis, we report methodological limitations that should be considered to avoid systematic reproduction of inconsistent and poorly reproducible experimental designs.
doi_str_mv 10.1017/S0031182018000057
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subjects Animals
Diet
Diet, High-Fat
Humans
Inflammation - pathology
Liver - parasitology
Malnutrition - parasitology
Mice
Rats
Schistosomiasis mansoni - physiopathology
Schistosomiasis mansoni - prevention & control
Vitamins - administration & dosage
Zinc - administration & dosage
title Could diet composition modulate pathological outcomes in schistosomiasis mansoni? A systematic review of in vivo preclinical evidence
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