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Dive into the research topics where Clifford R. Roberts is active.

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Featured researches published by Clifford R. Roberts.


Medical and Veterinary Entomology | 1991

Quantitation of malaria sporozoites transmitted in vitro during salivation by wild Afrotropical Anopheles

John C. Beier; Fred K. Onyango; Joseph K. Koros; Mutalib Ramadhan; Rose Ogwang; Robert A. Wirtz; Davy K. Koech; Clifford R. Roberts

Abstract. The malaria transmission potential of wild, infective Anopheles from western Kenya was evaluated by determining the number of sporozoites transmitted in vitro by salivation when their mouthparts were inserted into capillary tubes containing either sucrose or blood. With sucrose, 86.6% of 102 infective Anopheles transmitted a geometric mean (GM) of 3.84 sporozoites (range 1–34). With blood, 23.1% of 104 infective Anopheles, tested on the day of collection, transmitted a GM of 2.30 sporozoites (range 1–117). For Anopheles held 5 days postcapture before testing with blood, 53.6% of 56 transmitted a GM of 6.04 sporozoites (range 1–420). Transmitting Anopheles contained significantly more salivary gland sporozoites than non‐transmitters. No significant differences were detected between Anopheles gambiae Giles sensu lato and Anopheles funestus Giles in sporozoite transmission by individuals with sporozoites in their salivary glands.


Medical and Veterinary Entomology | 1991

Quantitation of malaria sporozoites in the salivary glands of wild Afrotropical Anopheles

John C. Beier; Fred K. Onyango; Mutalib Ramadhan; Joseph K. Koros; Charles M. Asiago; Robert A. Wirtz; Davy K. Koech; Clifford R. Roberts

Abstract. The number of malaria sporozoites in the salivary glands was determined microscopically for 1137 wild, naturally infected Anopheles from western Kenya. Infective Anopheles gambiae Giles sensu lato (n=874) contained a geometric mean (GM) of 962 sporozoites and An.funestus Giles (n=263) contained 812. No significant differences were detected in geometric mean numbers of sporozoites between species, collection techniques or sites.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1993

Human cutaneous leishmaniasis caused by Leishmania donovani s.l. in Kenya

Yemane B. Mebrahtu; Guillaume Van Eys; Ikram Guizani; Phillip G. Lawyer; Hannington Pamba; Davy K. Koech; Clifford R. Roberts; Peter V. Perkins; J.B.O. Were; Larry D. Hendricks

Our laboratory is characterizing Leishmania stabilates and isolates from active leishmaniasis cases. Smears and cultures from aspirates made on different dates from a single lesion on the bridge of the nose of an 18 years old Kenyan male from Nyandarua District contained Leishmania. The isolates, NLB-271 and NLB-271-IA, were characterized by cellulose acetate electrophoresis (CAE) using 20 enzyme systems and by Southern analysis using 2 deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) probes (pDK10 and pDK20) from a Dakar strain of L. major (MHOM/SN/00/DK1) and a third probe, p7-059 from L. infantum strain ITMAP-263. Digestion of the two Leishmania DNAs with endonucleases HindIII and PstI, followed by hybridization with the 3 probes, revealed DNA fragment banding patterns indistinguishable from those of the L. donovani species complex. The CAE isoenzyme profiles of these 2 Kenyan isolates were indistinguishable from those of Kenyan L. donovani strains we designated as zymodeme Z6. Excluding post-kala-azar dermal leishmaniasis, this constitutes the first human case of cutaneous leishmaniasis caused by L. donovani s.l. in Kenya. Previously, cutaneous leishmaniasis cases in Kenya have been due to L. aethiopica, L. major and L. tropica only.


Medical and Veterinary Entomology | 1993

Host feeding preference of Phlebotomus guggisbergi, a vector of Leishmania tropica in Kenya.

Richard N. Johnson; Philip M. Ngumbi; J. Panwel Mwanyumba; Clifford R. Roberts

Abstract. Recently the sandfly Phlebotomus guggisbergi was found to be a vector of Leishmania tropica causing cutaneous leishmaniasis in the Laikipia focus, Kenya, but extensive searches have shed no light on the identity of the rural reservoir host(s). In order to discover more about the biology of the vector, a host feeding preference study was conducted on wild sandflies in their natural cave environment over a 6‐month period. Solid state Army miniature (SSAM) traps, without light bulb, were suspended over cages with potential hosts or an empty cage control. The animals tested included sheep, goat, dog, cat, hamster, rabbit, giant rat (Cricetomys gambianus), crested rat (Lophiomys imhausi) and rock hyrax (Procavia capensis), all of which (except hamsters) are normally found in the vicinity of the study site. Sandfly collections from traps baited with goat, sheep, cat, dog, rabbit, or wild rodent species were significantly higher than the control, whereas trap collections with hamster and rock hyrax were not significantly different from the control. Numbers of sandflies collected from the goat, sheep and cat were significantly greater than from the rabbit and rodents. The sex ratio also varied between collections: larger animals attracted a higher proportion of female P.guggisbergi than did the smaller animals (P>0.05). Therefore greater emphasis should be placed on surveying larger animals to assess their status as reservoir hosts for L.tropica in Kenya.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1993

A new focus of kala-azar due to Leishmania donovani sensu lato in Kenya

R.N. Johnson; Philip M. Ngumbi; G. Gachihi; J.P. Mwanyumba; John Mbugua; N. Mosonik; J.B.O. Were; Clifford R. Roberts

Three Masai children from Kekonyokie South Location, Kajiado District were diagnosed with visceral leishmaniasis (kala-azar). Leishmanial isolates from the patients were characterized as Leishmania donovani sensu lato, by cellulose acetate electrophoresis. Case histories indicated that the disease was acquired locally. A survey of 409 children at 7 local primary schools and one nursery school revealed no additional case. Sandfly surveys using light traps and sticky paper traps recovered 10 species of sandfly, including 2 Phlebotomus species. P. martini was prevalent throughout the area. P. orientalis was only rarely encountered, but it was the first collection record of this species in the southern portion of the Rift Valley in Kenya. Although no Leishmania-infected sandfly was found, P. martini is probably the vector of kala-azar in the location, as it is elsewhere in Kenya.


Journal of Medical Entomology | 1990

Characterization of malaria transmission by Anopheles (Diptera: Culicidae) in western Kenya in preparation for malaria vaccine trials.

John C. Beier; Peter V. Perkins; Fred K. Onyango; Thomas P. Gargan; Charles N. Oster; Richard E. Whitmire; Davy K. Koech; Clifford R. Roberts


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1990

Development of Leishmania major in Phlebotomus duboscqi and Sergentomyia schwetzi (Diptera: Psychodidae).

Phillip G. Lawyer; Philip M. Ngumbi; Christopher O. Anjili; Shadrack Odongo; Yemane B. Mebrahtu; John I. Githure; Davy K. Koech; Clifford R. Roberts


Journal of Medical Entomology | 1990

Malaria sporozoite detection by dissection and ELISA to assess infectivity of Afrotropical Anopheles (Diptera: Culicidae).

John C. Beier; Peter V. Perkins; Joseph K. Koros; Fred K. Onyango; Thomas P. Gargan; Robert A. Wirtz; Davy K. Koech; Clifford R. Roberts


Journal of The American Mosquito Control Association | 1990

Anopheles gambiae complex egg-stage survival in dry soil from larval development sites in western Kenya.

John C. Beier; Copeland R; Oyaro C; Masinya A; W. O. Odago; Oduor S; Davy K. Koech; Clifford R. Roberts


Journal of Medical Entomology | 1991

Species composition of the Anopheles gambiae complex (diptera: Culicidae) at two sites in western Kenya.

Vincenzo Petrarca; John C. Beier; Fred K. Onyango; Joseph K. Koros; Charles M. Asiago; Davy K. Koech; Clifford R. Roberts

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Davy K. Koech

Kenya Medical Research Institute

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John C. Beier

Kenya Medical Research Institute

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Fred K. Onyango

Kenya Medical Research Institute

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Yemane B. Mebrahtu

Kenya Medical Research Institute

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Phillip G. Lawyer

National Institutes of Health

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Joseph K. Koros

Kenya Medical Research Institute

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Charles M. Asiago

Kenya Medical Research Institute

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Hannington Pamba

Kenya Medical Research Institute

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J.B.O. Were

Kenya Medical Research Institute

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John I. Githure

International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology

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