Contaminación con especies de
Cryptosporidum
en una playa de
Maryland, costa atlántica de
Norteamérica durante el verano en
función a la densidad y número de
bañistas.
Quantitative Evaluation of the Impact of
Bather Density on Levels of
Human-Virulent
Microsporidian Spores in
Recreational Water
Thaddeus K. Graczyk,1,2,3*
Deirdre Sunderland,1
Leena
Tamang,1 Timothy M. Shields,3
Frances E. Lucy,4 and Patrick
N. Breysse1
Department of Environmental Health
Sciences, Division of Environmental
Health Engineering,1
Johns Hopkins University Center for
Water and Health,2
Department of Molecular Microbiology
and Immunology, Johns Hopkins
Bloomberg School of Public Health,
Baltimore, Maryland,3 and
School of Science, Institute of
Technology,
Sligo, Ireland4
Microsporidial
gastroenteritis, a serious disease
of
immunocompromised
people, can have a waterborne
etiology. During summer months,
samples of recreational
bathing waters were tested weekly
for human-virulent
microsporidian
spores and water quality parameters
in association with high and
low bather numbers during weekends
and weekdays, respectively.
Enterocytozoon
bieneusi
spores were detected in
59% of weekend (n
= 27) and 30% of weekday (n
= 33) samples, and
Encephalitozoon
intestinalis
spores were concomitant
in a single weekend sample; the
overall prevalence was 43%.
The numbers of bathers, water
turbidity levels,
prevalences
of spore-positive samples, and
concentrations of spores were
significantly higher for
weekend than for weekday samples;
P
values were <0.001, <0.04,
<0.03, and <0.04, respectively.
Water turbidity and the
concentration of waterborne spores
were significantly
correlated with bather density, with
P values of
<0.001 and <0.01, respectively. As
all water samples were
collected on days deemed acceptable
for bathing by fecal
bacterial standards, this study
reinforces the scientific doubt
about the reliability of
bacterial indicators in predicting
human waterborne pathogens.
The study provides evidence that
bathing in public waters can
result in exposure to potentially
viable
microsporidian spores and
that body contact recreation
in potable water can play a
role in the epidemiology of
microsporidiosis.
The study indicates that
resuspension
of bottom sediments by
bathers resulted in elevated
turbidity values and implies that
the microbial load from both
sediments and bathers can act as
nonpoint
sources for the contamination of
recreational waters with
Enterocytozoon
bieneusi
spores. Both these mechanisms can
be considered for
implementation in predictive models
for contamination with
microsporidian
spores.