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Acta Tropica | 2012

Transmission of Leishmania infantum MON-98 to hamsters by the bite of Phlebotomus langeroni Nitzulescu (Diptera: Psychodidae)

Bahira M. El Sawaf; Said Abdallah Doha; Mohamed I. Imam

The ability of Phlebotomus langeroni to successfully acquire and transmit Leishmania infantum MON-98 to hamsters was demonstrated. Sand flies and Leishmania both originated from an infantile visceral leishmaniasis focus in El Agamy Egypt. P. langeroni females were infected by feeding on lesions of needle-inoculated hamster and on infected blood suspension using a chick-skin membrane apparatus. Infection rate of sand flies fed on membrane was 88% compared to 7.8% for flies fed on leishmanial lesion. The transmission to hamster took place by the bites of infective flies taking a second blood meal, on the 8th to 10th day post-feeding. Furthermore, successful transmission was by the bites of flies that took no blood or that took full blood meal. Whereas flies that took full blood meal were not infective as indicated by dissection. In three hamsters, lesions developed after three months. Leishmania amastigotes were demonstrated from the lesion as well as from the liver and spleen of infected hamsters.


Acta Tropica | 2016

Current knowledge of sand fly fauna (Diptera: Psychodidae) of northwestern Yemen and how it relates to leishmaniasis transmission

Bahira M. El Sawaf; Hala A. Kassem; Nabil M. Mogalli; Shabaan S. El Hossary; Nadia F. Ramadan

This report presents the results of the first entomological survey of the sand fly fauna in northwestern Yemen. Sand flies were collected using sticky paper traps and CDC light traps from Hajjah governorate, a cutaneous leishmaniasis focus due to Leishmania tropica. Six Phlebotomus species: P. alexandri, P. arabicus. P. bergeroti, P. orientalis, P. papatasi, P. sergenti and ten Sergentomyia species: S. africana, S. antennata, S. christophersi, S. dolichopa, S. dreyfussi, S. fallax, S. multidens, S. taizi, S. tiberiadis, S. yusafi were identified. P. alexandri was the most predominant Phlebotomus species and P. papatasi was a scarce species. S. fallax was the principal Sergentomyia species and S. dolichopa was the least species encountered. The diversity of the sand fly fauna within and among three altitudinal ranges using Simpson index and Jaccards diversity coefficient respectively were measured. High species diversity was found in all altitude ranges. There seemed to be more association between sand fly fauna in higher altitudes with fauna from moderate altitudes. Sand fly seasonal activity showed a mono-modal trend in the lowland and a confluent bimodal trend in the highlands. Leishmania DNA could not be detected from 150 Phlebotomus females using PCR-RFLP. A possible zoonotic cutaneous transmission cycle due to Leishmania tropica in northwestern Yemen would involve P. arabicus as the sand fly vector and the rock hyrax as the reservoir host. The vector competence for P. alexandri as a vector of visceral leishmaniasis in Hajjah governorate is discussed.


Acta Tropica | 2016

Clinicoepidemiologic pattern of cutaneous leishmaniasis and molecular characterization of its causative agent in Hajjah governorate, northwest of Yemen

Nabil M. Mogalli; Shabaan S. El Hossary; Mishri Lal Khatri; Abdualdaim M. Mukred; Hala A. Kassem; Bahira M. El Sawaf; Nadia F. Ramadan

The clinicoepidemiologic profile of 143 cases (93 males and 50 females) with cutaneous leishmaniasis from 18 villages of Hajjah governorate, Yemen was studied. Dry-type lesions were seen in 98.6% and wet-type lesions in 1.4% of patients. Lesions were localized in all cases with different morphological patterns. Microscopic examination of Giemsa-stained slit smears revealed amastigotes in 74.1% of patients with dry-type lesions and 0% in patients with wet-type lesions. The burden of the parasites in the lesions was high indicating active transmission of the disease. Most cases were from villages with moderate altitude range (8001-1600m). All age groups were affected, but most cases were seen in ages from 5 to 15 years. Leishmania species identification was done for all cases by polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism (PCR-RFLP). The biopsic material was scraped from both Giemsa-stained and methanol-fixed smears. The molecular characterization of Leishmania species revealed Leishmania tropica as the causative agent of cutaneous leishmaniasis in Hajjah, Yemen. The risk factors associated with the transmission of the disease and recommendations for improving case detection were discussed.


Egyptian Academic Journal of Biological Sciences. A, Entomology | 2017

A Simplified Identification key of Egyptian Sandfly Species

Sanaa El Sattar; Said Abdallah Doha; Shabaan S. El Hossary; Bahira M. El Sawaf

Citation: Egypt. Acad. J. Biolog. Sci. (A. Entomology) Vol. 10(4)pp: 8192(2017) Egyptian Academic Journal of Biological Sciences is the official English language journal of the Egyptian Society for Biological Sciences, Department of Entomology, Faculty of Sciences Ain Shams University. Entomology Journal publishes original research papers and reviews from any entomological discipline or from directly allied fields in ecology, behavioral biology, physiology, biochemistry, development, genetics, systematics, morphology, evolution, control of insects, arachnids, and general entomology. www.eajbs.eg.net Provided for non-commercial research and education use. Not for reproduction, distribution or commercial use.


Acta Tropica | 2017

Historical overview of infantile visceral leishmaniasis in El Agamy, Alexandria, Egypt

Hala A. Kassem; John C. Beier; Bahira M. El Sawaf

Infantile visceral leishmaniasis (IVL) is considered a rare and neglected disease in Egypt. An outbreak of the disease in El Agamy, Alexandria occurred in 1982 although the disease was previously reported 80 years before. Epidemiological and entomological studies were conducted ever since the 1982 outbreak to identify human cases, the parasite, reservoir host and the sand fly vector. Leishmania infantum MON-98, a new and unique zymodeme, was responsible of the disease. Stray dogs acted as the reservoir host and Phlebotomus langeroni was the proven vector. The parasite isolates from human cases were identical to the parasite isolates from the reservoir host and the sand fly vector. The El Agamy focus in 1982 was basically a rural Bedouin setting of recently built cement houses surrounded by lime stone fences. The numbers of human cases of IVL in this area have been declining, with the last reported case in 2005. This coincides with the completion of irregular urbanization of El Agamy which resulted in the disappearance of P. langeroni. In this review, we characterize the old focus of IVL in El Agamy based on published literature to identify factors underlying the appearance and disappearance of the disease.


Journal of Medical Entomology | 1993

Enzyme Polymorphism and Genetic Variability of One Colonized and Several Field Populations of Phlebotomus papatasi (Diptera: Psychodidae)

Hala A. Kassem; David J. Fryauff; Magdi G. Shehata; Bahira M. El Sawaf


Journal of Medical Entomology | 1986

Sand Flies (Diptera: Psychodidae) Associated with Visceral Leishmaniasis in El Agamy, Alexandria Governorate, Egypt

Beier Jc; Bahira M. El Sawaf; Morsy Ta; Adel Merdan; Manal M. Rifaat; Sherif El Said


Journal of Medical Entomology | 1986

Sand Flies (Diptera: Psychodidae) Associated with Visceral Leishmaniasis in El Agamy, Alexandria Governorate, Egypt II. Field behavior

Sherif El Said; Beier Jc; Bahira M. El Sawaf; Said Abdallah Doha; Ebtesam El Kordy


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1984

Phlebotomus langeroni: a potential vector of kala-azar in the Arab Republic of Egypt

Bahira M. El Sawaf; Beier Jc; Saied M. Hussein; Hala A. Kassem; Sanaa Abdel Satter


Journal of Medical Entomology | 1986

The immature stages of Phlebotomus langeroni (Diptera: Psychodidae).

Richard P. Lane; Bahira M. El Sawaf

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Beier Jc

Ain Shams University

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David J. Fryauff

Naval Medical Research Center

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