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Prevalence of Toxoplasma gondii in domestic animals in Sudan: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Abdullah, A. A. and Ahmed, M. and Bello, I. I. and Tawor, A. and Ahmed, A. O. and Khider, M. and Elduma, A. H.

Acta Veterinaria Eurasia (2022) 48: 216–226

DOI: 10.5152/actavet.2022.21065

Abstract

This study is aimed to estimate the pooled prevalence of Toxoplasma gondii infection in domestic animals in Sudan. This search included all published and unpublished studies written in Arabic and English before May 25, 2021. Databases namely Scopus, Web of Science, PubMed, MEDLINE, direct Google search, Google Scholar, world cat log, OpenGrey, OATD, and universities websites were used to retrieve published articles. Out of 650 screened studies, 27 articles with a total of 9926 animals were eligible for this meta-analysis. Data synthesis and statistical analysis were conducted by STATA software version 16. The pooled prevalence of overall T. gondii infections in the domestic animals, males, and females in Sudan was 38% (with CI 32%-45%), 36% (CI 25%-46%), and 38% (CI 28%-47%), respectively. Of these, the chicken had the highest prevalence of 80%, followed by sheep of 45%, goat of 41%, camel of 40%, cattle of 31%, horse of 31%, stray cats of 30%, and donkeys with the lowest prevalence of 16%. In this study, the reported pooled prevalenceof T. gondii infections in Sudan was higher compared with other countries. The interpretation of these findings should take into consideration the presence of substantial heterogeneity between the included studies.

Citation

Abdullah, A. A., Ahmed, M., Bello, I. I., Tawor, A., Ahmed, A. O., Khider, M., & Elduma, A. H. (2022). Prevalence of Toxoplasma gondii in domestic animals in Sudan: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Acta Veterinaria Eurasia, 48(3), 216–226. https://doi.org/10.5152/actavet.2022.21065 Animals, Prevalence, meta-analysis, systematic reviews, disease prevalence, epidemiology, literature reviews, poultry, domestic animals, infections, parasites, parasitoses, protozoal infections, toxoplasmosis, stray animals, Animals, Domestic, Animal Shells, disease incidence, Sudan

Keywords