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Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1996

Ecological interactions of visceral leishmaniasis in the state of Bahia, Brazil

Ítalo Rodrigues de Araújo Sherlock

The laboratory and field observations summarized in this paper on visceral leishmaniasis ecology in the State of Bahia, Brazil are based on the authors observations over the past 35 years in a number of states foci, public health records and literature citations. The disease is endemic with epidemic outbreaks occurring every ten years and its geographical distribution is expanding rapidly in the last years. Leishmania chagasi is the main ethiologic agent of the visceral leishmaniasis but Le. amazonensis s. lato was the only leishmania isolated by other authors from some visceral leishmaniasis human cases in the state. Lutzomyia longipalpis (with one or two spots on tergites III and IV and two sized different populations) was epidemiologically incriminated as the main vector. It was found naturally infected with promastigotes, and it was infected with four species of leishmanias in the laboratory. Although the experimental transmission of Le. amazonensis by the bite of Lu. longipalpis to hamsters was performed, the author was not successful in transmitting Le. chagasi in the same way. The dog is the most important domestic source for infection of the vector, however it is not a primary reservoir. The opossum Didelphis albiventris was found naturally infected with Le. chagasi but its role as reservoir is unknown. Foxes and rodents were not found infected with leishmanias in Bahia.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2002

Trapping Triatominae in Silvatic Habitats

François Noireau; Fernando Abad-Franch; Sebastião Aldo da Silva Valente; Artur Gomes Dias-Lima; Catarina Macedo Lopes; Vanda Cunha; Vera da Costa Valente; Francisco S Palomeque; Carlos J Carvalho-Pinto; Ítalo Rodrigues de Araújo Sherlock; Marcelo Aguilar; Mário Steindel; Edmundo C. Grisard; José Jurberg

Large-scale trials of a trapping system designed to collect silvatic Triatominae are reported. Live-baited adhesive traps were tested in various ecosystems and different triatomine habitats (arboreal and terrestrial). The trials were always successful, with a rate of positive habitats generally over 20% and reaching 48.4% for palm trees of the Amazon basin. Eleven species of Triatominae belonging to the three genera of public health importance (Triatoma, Rhodnius and Panstrongylus) were captured. This trapping system provides an effective way to detect the presence of triatomines in terrestrial and arboreal silvatic habitats and represents a promising tool for ecological studies. Various lines of research are contemplated to improve the performance of this trapping system.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1984

Natural infection of the opossum Didelphis albiventris (Marsupialia, Didelphidae) with Leishmania donovani, in Brazil

Ítalo Rodrigues de Araújo Sherlock; José Carlos Miranda; Moysés Sadigursky; Gabriel Grimaldi Junior

An opossum, Didelphis albiventris, from Jacobina, Bahia State, was found naturally infected with Leishmania donovani, being the first non-canid wild mammal to be detected with the agent of kala-azar in the New World.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1980

Epidemiological aspects of three Trypanosoma cruzi zymodemes in Bahia State, Brazil

Toby V. Barrett; Rodney Hoff; Kenneth E. Mott; Michael A. Miles; D.G. Godfrey; R. Teixeira; J.A.Almeida de Souza; Ítalo Rodrigues de Araújo Sherlock

Culture forms of 104 stocks of Trypanosoma cruzi isolated in different regions of the State of Bahia were compared by electrophoresis of six enzymes. The three distinct combinations of isoenzyme patterns seen were designated ZI, Z2 and Z3. In an area of endemic Chagass disease in eastern Bahia, T. cruzi Z1 was associated with sylvatic mammals and sylvatic triatomines, whereas T. cruzi Z2 was associated with a separate domestic cycleof transmission. T. cruzi Z1 was also found in sylvatic triatomines from other parts of the State. In contrast, in an area of the São Francisco Valley region of western Bahia, both T. cruzi Z1 and Z2 were isolated from man, domestic animals, and peridomestic rats. T. cruzi Z3 was isolated from an armadillo and from Panstrongylus geniculatus, a triatomine commonly found in armadillo burrows. Both T. cruzi Z1 and Z2 appeared to be pathogenic in man: T. cruzi Z1 was isolated from patients with acute Chagass disease and from a single patient with chronic cardiac manifestations. T. cruzi Z2 was isolated from some asymptomatic individuals but was also associated with acute disease and chronic cardiac and digestive syndromes.


Veterinary Parasitology | 2003

A follow-up of Beagle dogs intradermally infected with Leishmania chagasi in the presence or absence of sand fly saliva.

Moacir Paranhos-Silva; Geraldo Gileno de Sá Oliveira; Eliana A. G. Reis; Rejane M. C. Menezes; Octavio Fernandes; Ítalo Rodrigues de Araújo Sherlock; Regis Gomes; Lain Pontes-de-Carvalho; Washington L. C. dos-Santos

Abstract In this study, we compare the development of infection and/or disease in Beagle dogs intradermally infected with Leishmania chagasi, in the presence or absence of Lutzomyia longipalpis saliva, with those of intravenously infected animals. Spleen samples of all the animals inoculated with parasites had positive polymerase chain reaction tests for Leishmania DNA. Positive spleen cultures for Leishmania were detected earlier (P≤0.018) and were more frequent (five out of the five animals) in intravenously infected animals than in the intradermally infected animals, in presence (two out of the six animals) or absence (three out of the five animals) of salivary gland lysate of L. longipalpis. Significant increase in serum antibodies against Leishmania was observed only in the intravenously infected group (P=0.004). In addition, dogs with infection confirmed by isolation of amastigotes or detection of parasite DNA were, nevertheless, negative for anti-Leishmania antibodies up to 5 months or more after infection. Only animals of the intravenously infected group developed progressive decreases in hematocrit (Pearson r=−0.8076, P=0.0026) and hemoglobin (Pearson r=−0.8403, P=0.0012) during the infection period. No significant difference in the course of infection was observed between groups of intradermally infected animals. The data presented herein confirms that the intradermal inoculation of dogs with Leishmania produces an asymptomatic form of infection. It also fails to show an advantage in using L. longipalpis saliva as an infection-enhancing agent in experimental canine leishmaniasis.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2000

Sylvatic vectors invading houses and the risk of emergence of cases of Chagas disease in Salvador, State of Bahia, Northeast Brazil

Artur Gomes Dias-Lima; Ítalo Rodrigues de Araújo Sherlock

During the last twenty years, several adults of Triatoma tibiamaculata infected with Trypanosoma cruzi have been spontaneously caught by inhabitants, inside their houses in the new habitational district of Pitua¿u of Salvador, Bahia. In this communication the authors call attention to the necessity of studies about the possibility of occurrence of new human cases of Chagas disease, to clarify the obscure origin of some positive blood donors in Salvador.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1979

An outbreak of acute Chagas's disease in the São Francisco Valley region of Bahia, Brazil: triatomine vectors and animal reservoirs of Trypanosoma cruzi

Toby V. Barrett; Rodney Hoff; Kenneth E. Mott; F. Guedes; Ítalo Rodrigues de Araújo Sherlock

Following reports of an unusually high incidence of acute Chagass disease and the appearance of large numbers of Triatoma infestans in the southwestern region of the State of Bahia, triatomine bugs (Hemiptera: Reduviidae) and domestic animals in one of the affected communities were surveyed and examined for infection with Trypanosoma cruzi. Triatoma infestans was prevalent in houses and was also found in peridomestic habitats. T. sordida and T. pseudomaculata occupied peridomestic and sylvatic habitats and T. brasiliensis was found only among rocks far from houses. Panstrongylus megistus, formerly present in the region, was not found. Trypanosoma cruzi was detected in 19.5% of Triatoma infestans, 11.5% of T. sordida, 19% of dogs, 29% of cats and 100% of rats examined. A disproportionate number of early instar bugs were infected with Trypanosoma cruzi, suggesting that a rapid increase in the rate of transmission had recently occurred. The history of the domestic triatomine fauna of the region since 1912 is reviewed, and it is proposed that the relatively recent arrival of Triatoma infestans initiated a domestic cycle linked to peridomestic and sylvatic cycles of Trypanosoma cruzi transmission. Increased human mobility, the use of DDT for malaria control, and drought conditions are considered as factors which might have contributed to the outbreak of human infection.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1982

Comparison of filtration staining (Bell) and thick smear (Kato) for the detection and quantitation of Schistosoma mansoni eggs in faeces

Adrian C. Sleigh; Rodney Hoff; Kenneth E. Mott; Mauricio Lima Barreto; Tereza Maisk de Paiva; Jose de Souza Pedrosa; Ítalo Rodrigues de Araújo Sherlock

We compare results of one Bell and one Kato-Katz examination performed on each of 315 stool specimens from residents in an area in north-eastern Brazil endemic for schistosomiasis mansoni. The prevalence of Schistosome infection detected by the Bell technique was 76% and by the Kato-Katz technique was 63%. 81% (44/54) of the infections missed by a Kato-Katz smear were light infections (one of 50 epg range by Bell examination). Over, all, 55% (44/80) of stools in this egg count range by the Bell technique were negative on a single Kato-Katz smear. This implies that five Kato-Katz smears per stool would ensure a 95% probability (0.55(5) X 100) of detecting such light infections. However, a single Kato-Katz smear detected eggs in 97% (124/128) of stools with a Bell count greater than 100 epg. For stools positive by both methods the egg counts per gram of stool were higher (p less than 0.001) by Kato-Katz examination. Geometric mean egg counts for the infected population were 199 epg by the Kato-Katz and 92 epg by the Bell methods. 64% (59 v. 36) more persons were classified as heavily infected (greater than 400 epg) by the Kato-Katz method than by the Bell method. The differing measurements of schistosome infection obtained with the Bell and Kato-Katz methods must be considered when comparing data on morbidity-infection relationships.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1981

A three year follow-up of chemotherapy with oxamniquine in a Brazilian community with endemic schistosomiasis mansoni

Adrian C. Sleigh; Kenneth E. Mott; J.T.França Silva; T.M. Muniz; Mota E; Mauricio Lima Barreto; Rodney Hoff; James H. Maguire; J.S. Lehman; Ítalo Rodrigues de Araújo Sherlock

Oral oxamniquine was tested as a control strategy for endemic schistosomiasis in a rural area of Bahia, Brazil. Adults were treated with a single dose (12.5 to 15 mg per kg) and children (less than 12 years old) with a total of 20 mg per kg in two doses. The 191 (infected) persons treated represented 69% of the infected population in the study area. Follow-up stool examinations (Kato-Katz method) at one, 3, 6, 13, 25 and 33 months showed the cure rate declining from 80% at three months to 46% at 33 months. Over one half of those not cured showed a decrease in egg counts throughout the follow-up which, after 33 months, remained 66% below the pre-treatment levels. Stool examinations conducted on all study area residents during three years before chemotherapy showed the prevalence and intensity of Schistosoma mansoni infection to be high and stable. 33 months after the chemotherapy the prevalence was 41% and for infected individuals the geometric mean egg count was 121 epg, a decline of respectively 35% and 40% from pre-treatment levels for each index. Chemotherapy of infected persons with oxamniquine protected the community as a whole from high worm burdens for almost three years, although at this point the prevalence began to rise towards pretreatment levels.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1993

Development of Eosinophilia in dogs intradermically inoculated with sand fly saliva and Leishmania (Leishmania) chagasi stationary-phase promastigotes

Moacir Paranhos; Washington Luis Conrado dos Santos; Ítalo Rodrigues de Araújo Sherlock; Geraldo Gileno de Sá Oliveira; Lain Carlos Pontes de Carvalho

Salivary gland lysates of the sand fly Lutzomia longipalpis have been shown to enhance the infectivity of Leishmania in mice. As shown herein, the simultaneous inoculation of Leishmania chagasi stationary-phase promastigotes and L. longipalpis salivary gland lysate by the intradermal route in a group of mongrel dogs induced a statistically significant eosinophilia, in relation to dogs inoculated with Leishmania or with salivary gland lysate only. These dogs had no evidence of infection, in spite of the high infectivity of the promastigotes when inoculated by the intravenous route.

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James H. Maguire

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Mota E

Federal University of Bahia

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