Parasite (Jan 2022)

Could the re-emerging practice of wild boar hunting linked to the recent economic crisis lead to new outbreaks of trichinellosis in Lebanon?

  • Khalil Georges,
  • Marty Pierre,
  • Hage Karl,
  • Sfeir Salma,
  • El Hage Jeanne,
  • Bou Assi Tarek,
  • Rassam Maria,
  • Pomares Christelle,
  • Mikhael Elio

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1051/parasite/2022011
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 29
p. 11

Abstract

Read online

Background: Documented trichinellosis outbreaks in Lebanon date back to the late 19th century. The first published outbreaks were attributed to the consumption of wild boar meat, while those that followed incriminated pork. The practice of hunting wild boar is currently re-emerging in Lebanon given the recent economic crisis that has limited the purchase of livestock meat. Results: In Lebanon, at least 15 outbreaks of trichinellosis have been reported since 1870. We report an outbreak in January 2019, where five of the fifteen people present at a barbecue party were diagnosed with trichinellosis after wild boar meat consumption. Two subspecies of wild boar, Sus scrofa libycus and Sus scrofa scrofa, are commonly targeted by hunters. Hunters and consumers are sometimes unaware of the ineffectiveness of freezing meat and cooking over a wood fire to avoid trichinellosis. Unexpectedly, the National Center for Zoonosis Control receives every year 4 samples of wild boar meat, all free of Trichinella sp. larvae. Conclusion: Trichinellosis, a zoonosis typically unrecognized or undeclared, still represents a risk linked to the consumption of meat from wild animals, especially wild boar. Consumers, hunters, veterinarians, and butchers need to be further educated. Government regulation of wild boar hunting should be implemented to prevent further outbreaks.

Keywords