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Dive into the research topics where Daniel Strickman is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel Strickman.


Journal of Medical Entomology | 2000

Longitudinal studies of Aedes aegypti (Diptera : Culicidae) in Thailand and Puerto Rico : Blood feeding frequency

Thomas W. Scott; Priyanie H. Amerasinghe; Amy C. Morrison; Leslie H. Lorenz; Gary G. Clark; Daniel Strickman; Pattamaporn Kittayapong; John D. Edman

Abstract We used a histologic technique to study multiple blood feeding in a single gonotrophic cycle by engorged Aedes aegypti (L.) that were collected weekly for 2 yr from houses in a rural village in Thailand (n = 1,891) and a residential section of San Juan, Puerto Rico (n = 1,675). Overall, mosquitoes from Thailand contained significantly more multiple meals (n = 1,300, 42% double meals, 5% triple meals) than mosquitoes collected in Puerto Rico (n = 1,156, 32% double meals, 2% triple meals). The portion of specimens for which frequency of feeding could not be determined was 31% at both sites. We estimated that on average Ae. aegypti take 0.76 and 0.63 human blood meals per day in Thailand and Puerto Rico, respectively. However, frequency of multiple feeding varied among houses and, in Puerto Rico, the neighborhoods from which mosquitoes were collected. In Thailand 65% of the mosquitoes fed twice on the same day, whereas in Puerto Rico 57% took multiple meals separated by ≥ 1 d. At both sites, the majority of engorged specimens were collected inside houses (Thailand 86%, Puerto Rico 95%). The number of blood meals detected was independent of where mosquitoes were collected (inside versus outside of the house) at both sites and the time of day collections were made in Puerto Rico. Feeding rates were slightly higher for mosquitoes collected in the afternoon in Thailand. Temperatures were significantly higher and mosquitoes significantly smaller in Thailand than in Puerto Rico. At both sites female size was negatively associated with temperature. Rates of multiple feeding were associated positively with temperature and negatively with mosquito size in Thailand, but not in Puerto Rico. Multiple feeding during a single gonotrophic cycle is a regular part of Ae. aegypti biology, can vary geographically and under different climate conditions, and may be associated with variation in patterns of dengue virus transmission.


The Lancet | 1996

Scrub typhus infections poorly responsive to antibiotics in northern Thailand

George Watt; Charoen Chouriyagune; Ronnatrai Ruangweerayud; Pochaman Watcharapichat; Duangporn Phulsuksombati; Krisada Jongsakul; Paktiya Teja-Isavadharm; Dharadhida Bhodhidatta; Kevin D Corcoran; Daniel Strickman

BACKGROUND Rickettsia tsutsugamushi, the aetiological agent of scrub typhus, is common in Asia and readily infects visitors to areas where disease transmission occurs. Rapid defervescence after antibiotic treatment is so characteristic that it is used as a diagnostic test for R tsutsugamushi infection. Reports from local physicians that patients with scrub typhus in Chiangrai, northern Thailand responded badly to appropriate antibiotic therapy prompted us to do a prospective clinical evaluation and antibiotic susceptibility testing of human rickettsial isolates. METHODS The clinical response to doxycycline treatment in patients with early, mild scrub typhus in northern Thailand was compared with the results of treatment in Mae Sod, western Thailand. Prototype and naturally occurring strains of R tsutsugamushi were tested for susceptibility to chloramphenicol and doxycycline in mice and in cell culture. FINDINGS By the third day of treatment, fever had cleared in all seven patients from Mae Sod, but in only five of the 12 (40%) from Chiangrai (p < 0.01). Median fever clearance time in Chiangrai (80 h; range 15-190) was significantly longer than in Mae Sod (30 h; range 4-58; p < 0.005). Conjunctival suffusion resolved significantly more slowly in Chiangrai (p < 0.05). Antibiotics prevented death in mice infected by Chiangrai strains of R tsutsugamushi less often than after infection by the prototype strain (p < 0.05). Only one of three Chiangrai strains tested in cell culture was fully susceptible to doxycycline. INTERPRETATION Chloramphenicol-resistant and doxycycline-resistant strains of R tsutsugamushi occur in Chiangrai, Thailand. This is the first evidence of naturally occurring antimicrobial resistance in the genus Rickettsia.


Journal of Medical Entomology | 2000

Longitudinal Studies of Aedes aegypti (Diptera: Culicidae) in Thailand and Puerto Rico: Population Dynamics

Thomas W. Scott; Amy C. Morrison; Leslie H. Lorenz; Gary G. Clark; Daniel Strickman; Pattamaporn Kittayapong; Hong Zhou; John D. Edman

Abstract Aspiration collections of adult Aedes aegypti (L.) were made weekly from inside and outside of houses for 3 yr in a rural Thai village (n = 9,637 females and n = 11,988 males) and for 2 yr in a residential section of San Juan, Puerto Rico (n = 5,941 females and n = 6,739 males). In Thailand, temperature and rainfall fell into distinct seasonal categories, but only temperature was correlated with fluctuations in female abundance. Average weekly temperature 6 wk before mosquitoes were collected and minimum weekly temperature during the week of collection provided the highest correlations with female abundance. Accounting for annual variation significantly improved Thai models of temperature and mosquito abundance. In Puerto Rico, temperature, but not rainfall, could be categorized into seasonal patterns. Neither was correlated with changes in female abundance. At both sites the vast majority of females were collected inside houses and most contained a blood meal. Most teneral females were collected outside. Wing length—an indicator of female size—and parity, egg development or engorgement status were not correlated, indicating that feeding success and survival were not influenced by female size. At both sites, females fed almost exclusively on human hosts (≥96%), a pattern that did not change seasonally. In Puerto Rico more nonhuman blood meals were detected in mosquitoes collected outside than inside houses; no such difference was detected in Thailand. Gut contents of dissected females indicated that females in the Thai population had a younger age distribution and fed more frequently on blood than did Ae. aegypti in Puerto Rico. Our results indicated that aspects of this species’ biology can vary significantly from one location to another and 1 yr to the next.


Archive | 2006

Insect Repellents : Principles, Methods, and Uses

Mustapha Debboun; Stephen P. Frances; Daniel Strickman

Preface, M. Debboun, S. Frances, and D. Strickman Principles History of Insect Repellents, S.J. Moore and M. Debboun Terminology of Insect Repellents, G.B. White Vertebrate Chemical Defense: Secreted and Topically Acquired Deterrents of Arthropods, P.J. Weldon and J.F. Carroll Human Emanations and Related Natural Compounds that Inhibit Mosquito Host-Finding Ability, U.R. Bernier, D.L. Kline, and K.H. Posey Methods Standard Methods for Testing Mosquito Repellents, D.R. Barnard, U.R. Bernier, R.-d. Xue, and M. Debboun Biometrics and Behavior in Mosquito Repellent Assays, D.R. Barnard and R.-d. Xue Animal Models in Research and Development of Insect Repellents for Human Use, L.C. Rutledge and R.K. Gupta Techniques for Evaluating Insect Repellents, J.M. Govere and D.N. Durrheim Use of an Olfactometer for Determining Attractants and Repellents, J.F. Butler Discovery and Design of New Arthropod/Insect Repellents by Computer-Aided Molecular Modeling, R.K. Gupta and A.K. Bhattacharjee Molecular-Based Chemical Prospecting of Mosquito Attractants and Repellents, W.S. Leal Products and Active Ingredients Evaluation of Topical Insect Repellents and Factors that Affect Their Performance, S.P. Carroll Repellents Used in Fabric: The Experience of the U.S. Military, W.C. McCain and G.J. Leach Plant-Based Insect Repellents, S.J. Moore, A. Lenglet, and N. Hill Considerations on the Use of Botanically-Derived Repellent Products, E.J. Gerberg and R.J. Novak Efficacy and Safety of Repellents Containing Deet, S.P. Frances Lipodeet: An Improved Formulation for a Safe, Long-Lasting Repellent, B. Salafsky, T. Shibuya, Y.-X. He, J. Ha, and K. Ramaswamy Picaridin, S.P. Frances DEPA: Efficacy, Safety and Use of N,N-Diethyl Phenylacetamide, a Multi-Insect Repellent, S. Prakash, R. Vijayaraghavan, and K. Sekhar PMD (p-Menthane-3,8-Diol) and Quwenling, D. Strickman IR3535(R) (Ethyl Butylacetylaminopropionate), G. Puccetti Older Synthetic Active Ingredients and Current Additives, D. Strickman Area Repellent Products, D. Strickman Uses User Acceptability: Public Perceptions of Insect Repellents, S.P. Frances and M. Debboun Commercially Available Insect Repellents and Criteria for Their Use, R.-D. Xue, A. Ali, and J.F. Day Global Regulatory Perspectives on Insect Repellent Development and Registration, K.J. Sweeney Epilogue Prospects for the Future, D. Strickman, S.P. Frances, and M. Debboun Appendices Index


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2002

The Past and Present Threat of Rickettsial Diseases to Military Medicine and International Public Health

Daryl J. Kelly; Allen L. Richards; Joseph J. Temenak; Daniel Strickman

Morbidity and mortality caused by rickettsioses have had a major influence on military activities and public health for >2000 years. The threat posed by the rickettsioses is reviewed, focusing on the impact and epidemiology of those that have adversely influenced wartime operations and the current challenges posed by these diseases. With their uneven worldwide distribution, the discovery of drug-refractory strains of Orientia tsutsugamushi, the increased threat of their use in acts of bioterrorism, frequent deployment of troops to regions of endemicity, and exposures due to increased humanitarian missions, these diseases continue to be a threat to military personnel in the field. Effective strategies to reduce the impact of these diseases include development of effective vaccines, enhanced surveillance, and development of new safe, effective, and odorless repellants. The continuation of a proven, highly productive military infectious disease research program is essential for providing solutions to these daunting tasks.


The Lancet | 2000

Doxycycline and rifampicin for mild scrub-typhus infections in northern Thailand: a randomised trial.

George Watt; Pacharee Kantipong; Krisada Jongsakul; Pochaman Watcharapichat; Duangporn Phulsuksombati; Daniel Strickman

BACKGROUND Some strains of scrub typhus in northern Thailand are poorly responsive to standard antirickettsial drugs. We therefore did a masked, randomised trial to compare rifampicin with standard doxycycline therapy for patients with scrub typhus. METHODS Adult patients with strictly defined, mild scrub typhus were initially randomly assigned 1 week of daily oral treatment with 200 mg doxycycline (n=40), 600 mg rifampicin (n=38), or doxycycline with rifampicin (n=11). During the first year of treatment, the combined regimen was withdrawn because of lack of efficacy and the regimen was replaced with 900 mg rifampicin (n=37). Treatment outcome was assessed by fever clearance time (the time for oral temperature to fall below 37.3 degrees C). FINDINGS About 12,800 fever patients were screened during the 3-year study to recruit 126 patients with confirmed scrub typhus and no other infection, of whom 86 completed therapy. Eight individuals received the combined regimen that was discontinued after 1 year. The median duration of pyrexia was significantly shorter (p=0.01) in the 24 patients treated with 900 mg daily rifampicin (fever clearance time 22.5 h) and in the 26 patients who received 600 mg rifampicin (fever clearance time 27.5 h) than in the 28 patients given doxycycline monotherapy (fever clearance time 52 h). Fever resolved in a significantly higher proportion of patients within 48 h of starting rifampicin (900 mg=79% [19 of 24], 600 mg=77% [20 of 26]) than in patients treated with doxycycline (46% [13 of 28]; p=0.02). Severe gastrointestinal events warranted exclusion of two patients on doxycyline. There were two relapses after doxycycline therapy, but none after rifampicin therapy. INTERPRETATION Rifampicin is more effective than doxycycline against scrub-typhus infections acquired in northern Thailand, where strains with reduced susceptibility to antibiotics can occur.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Making Mosquito Taxonomy Useful: A Stable Classification of Tribe Aedini that Balances Utility with Current Knowledge of Evolutionary Relationships.

Richard C. Wilkerson; Yvonne-Marie Linton; Dina M. Fonseca; Ted R. Schultz; Dana C. Price; Daniel Strickman

The tribe Aedini (Family Culicidae) contains approximately one-quarter of the known species of mosquitoes, including vectors of deadly or debilitating disease agents. This tribe contains the genus Aedes, which is one of the three most familiar genera of mosquitoes. During the past decade, Aedini has been the focus of a series of extensive morphology-based phylogenetic studies published by Reinert, Harbach, and Kitching (RH&K). Those authors created 74 new, elevated or resurrected genera from what had been the single genus Aedes, almost tripling the number of genera in the entire family Culicidae. The proposed classification is based on subjective assessments of the “number and nature of the characters that support the branches” subtending particular monophyletic groups in the results of cladistic analyses of a large set of morphological characters of representative species. To gauge the stability of RH&K’s generic groupings we reanalyzed their data with unweighted parsimony jackknife and maximum-parsimony analyses, with and without ordering 14 of the characters as in RH&K. We found that their phylogeny was largely weakly supported and their taxonomic rankings failed priority and other useful taxon-naming criteria. Consequently, we propose simplified aedine generic designations that 1) restore a classification system that is useful for the operational community; 2) enhance the ability of taxonomists to accurately place new species into genera; 3) maintain the progress toward a natural classification based on monophyletic groups of species; and 4) correct the current classification system that is subject to instability as new species are described and existing species more thoroughly defined. We do not challenge the phylogenetic hypotheses generated by the above-mentioned series of morphological studies. However, we reduce the ranks of the genera and subgenera of RH&K to subgenera or informal species groups, respectively, to preserve stability as new data become available.


Journal of Medical Entomology | 2012

Larval Mosquito Habitat Utilization and Community Dynamics of Aedes albopictus and Aedes japonicus (Diptera: Culicidae)

Kristen Bartlett-Healy; Isik Unlu; Peter Obenauer; Tony Hughes; Sean P. Healy; Taryn Crepeau; Ary Farajollahi; Banu Kesavaraju; Dina M. Fonseca; George B. Schoeler; Randy Gaugler; Daniel Strickman

ABSTRACT Aedes albopictus (Skuse) and Ae. japonicus (Theobald) are important container-inhabiting mosquitoes that transmit disease agents, outcompete native species, and continue to expand their range in the United States. Both species deposit eggs in natural and artificial containers and thrive in peridomestic environments. The goal of our study was to examine the types and characteristics of containers that are most productive for these species in the northeastern United States. In total, 306 containers were sampled in urban, suburban, and rural areas of New Jersey. Multiple biotic and abiotic factors were recorded in an attempt to identify variables associated with the productivity of each species. Based on pupal abundance and density of container types, results showed that tires, trash cans, and planter dishes were the most important containers for Ae. albopictus, while planter dishes were the most important containers for Ae. japonicus. Container color (black and gray), material (rubber), and type (tires) were correlated with species presence for Ae. albopictus and Ae. japonicus. These factors may play a role in the selection of oviposition sites by female mosquitoes or in the survival of their progeny. Differences in species composition and abundance were detected between areas classified as urban, suburban, and rural. In urban and suburban areas, Ae. albopictus was more abundant in container habitats than Ae. japonicus; however, Ae. japonicus was more abundant in rural areas, and when water temperatures were below 14°C Our results suggest many variables can influence the presence of Ae. albopictus and Ae. japonicus in container habitats in northeastern United States.


Journal of Medical Entomology | 2008

Topically Applied AaeIAP1 Double-Stranded RNA Kills Female Adults of Aedes aegypti

Julia W. Pridgeon; Liming Zhao; James J. Becnel; Daniel Strickman; Gary G. Clark; Kenneth J. Linthicum

Abstract Aedes aegypti (L.) (Diptera: Culicidae) is the primary vector of both dengue and yellow fever. Use of insecticides is one of the primary ways to control this medically important insect pest. However, few new insecticides have been developed for mosquito control in recent years. As a part of our effort to develop new insecticides to control mosquitoes, an inhibitor of apoptosis protein 1 gene in Aedes aegypti (AaeIAP1) was targeted for the development of molecular pesticides. Herein, for the first time, we report that topically applied AaeIAP1 double-stranded RNA products are able to kill female adults of Ae. aegypti. Our results indicate that critical pathways or genes could be targeted to develop molecular pesticides for the control of medically important diseases vectors.


Pest Management Science | 2011

Area-wide management of Aedes albopictus: choice of study sites based on geospatial characteristics, socioeconomic factors and mosquito populations†

Isik Unlu; Ary Farajollahi; Sean P. Healy; Taryn Crepeau; Kristen Bartlett-Healy; Eric Williges; Daniel Strickman; Gary G. Clark; Randy Gaugler; Dina M. Fonseca

BACKGROUND Aedes (Stegomyia) albopictus (Skuse), the Asian tiger mosquito, is an introduced invasive species in the United States that is responsible for a significant proportion of service requests to local mosquito control programs. This container-utilizing mosquito is refractory to standard mosquito abatement measures in the United States. This study is part of a USDA-ARS project to develop an area-wide management strategy for Ae. albopictus. The goal was to identify three study sites, similar in socioeconomic parameters, geography and Ae. albopictus abundance, in urban and suburban areas in Mercer and Monmouth counties in New Jersey. Prior service requests and light trap counts and also detailed county maps were used to chose nine preliminary sites (four in Mercer and five in Monmouth) where weekly surveillance for Ae. albopictus was performed throughout the 2008 active season. RESULTS Although outliers were detected, socioeconomic variables in the study sites within each county were fairly consistent. Ae. albopictus abundance was associated with poverty levels and had the highest maxima in Mercer, although average mosquito abundance was similar in urban Mercer and suburban Monmouth. CONCLUSION Three study sites in each county were identified for future studies. The summer-long surveillance also revealed socioeconomic variables critical for the development of integrated mosquito management.

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Mustapha Debboun

Walter Reed Army Institute of Research

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Gary G. Clark

United States Department of Agriculture

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