4.7 Article

Quiescence Generates Moving Average in a Stochastic Epidemiological Model with One Host and Two Parasites

Journal

MATHEMATICS
Volume 10, Issue 13, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/math10132289

Keywords

parasite dormancy; moving average; epidemiology; stochasticity; coevolution; infectious diseases

Categories

Funding

  1. Petroleum Technology Development Fund (PTDF) of Nigeria
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) through the TUM International Graduate School of Science and Engineering (IGSSE) [GSC 81]

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Mathematical models are widely used to study the dynamics of coevolution and epidemiology, which can help improve disease management strategies. This study focuses on the influence of quiescence/dormancy on the dynamics of parasites and hosts. Deterministic and stochastic models are developed to analyze stability and stochasticity of the system, and it is found that quiescence can affect the variance of infected individuals and may dampen off stochasticity.
Mathematical modelling of epidemiological and coevolutionary dynamics is widely being used to improve disease management strategies of infectious diseases. Many diseases present some form of intra-host quiescent stage, also known as covert infection, while others exhibit dormant stages in the environment. As quiescent/dormant stages can be resistant to drug, antibiotics, fungicide treatments, it is of practical relevance to study the influence of these two life-history traits on the coevolutionary dynamics. We develop first a deterministic coevolutionary model with two parasite types infecting one host type and study analytically the stability of the dynamical system. We specifically derive a stability condition for a five-by-five system of equations with quiescence. Second, we develop a stochastic version of the model to study the influence of quiescence on stochasticity of the system dynamics. We compute the steady state distribution of the parasite types which follows a multivariate normal distribution. Furthermore, we obtain numerical solutions for the covariance matrix of the system under symmetric and asymmetric quiescence rates between parasite types. When parasite strains are identical, quiescence increases the variance of the number of infected individuals at high transmission rate and vice versa when the transmission rate is low. However, when there is competition between parasite strains with different quiescent rates, quiescence generates a moving average behaviour which dampen off stochasticity and decreases the variance of the number of infected hosts. The strain with the highest rate of entering quiescence determines the strength of the moving average and the magnitude of reduction of stochasticity. Thus, it is worth investigating simple models of multi-strain parasite under quiescence/dormancy to improve disease management strategies.

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