Julio A. Vexenat
University of Brasília
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Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1986
Julio A. Vexenat; A.C. Barreto; César Augusto Cuba Cuba; Philip Davis Marsden
The phlebotomine fauna is highly varied in tres Bracos, an endemic area american cutaneous leishmaniasis, situated in the cacao growing region in the southeast of Bahia State, brazil. Thirty species of the Lutzomyia genus were identified in 13,535 spcecimens collected between 1976 and 1984. Lutzomyia whitmani was the dominant species accounting for 99% or flies in the periodomicile and 97.5% of those caught in homes. In the forest the predominant species were Lu. ayrozai and Lu. yulli. Lu whitmani accounted for only 1.0% of the specimens examined. Lu. flaviscutellata, the proven vector of Leishmania mexicana amazonensis, was also collected in small numbers, I.u. wellcomei, a known vector of L. braziliensis braziliensis in the Serra dos Carajas, Para, Brazil was not encountered in the Tres Bracos region where the parasite causing human infections is usually L.b. braziliensis. Although we have not encountered a natural infection with leishmanial promastigotes in 1.832 females of the various species examined, we discuss the probability that Lu. whitmani is the vector of L.b braziliensis in the region mantaining transmission in dogs and man.
Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1986
Julio A. Vexenat; Air C. Barretto; Ana de Cássia Rosa
Lutzomyia (N.) whitmani was infected on leishmaniotic lesions of three out of nine dogs infected with Leishmania braziliensis braziliensis. The infectivity rates in these sandflies were 8.3% (1/12), 7,1% (1/14) and 1.8% (3/160), respectively. In addition, 180 Lu. whitmani fed on non-ulcerated regions of one of the infected dogs and none became infected. We emphasize the vector potentiality of Lu., whitmani L.b. braziliensis in the endemic region of Tres Bracos, Bahia, Brazil.
Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1994
Julio A. Vexenat; J. A. Fonseca de Castro; Rodolfo C. Cavalcante; João Tavares; M. R. B. da Silva; W. H. Batista; J. H. Furtado Campos; M. K. Howard; I. Frame; R. McNerney; S. Wilson; Michael A. Miles
A Leishmania donovani-complex specific DNA probe was used to confirm the widespread dissemination of amastigotes in apparently normal skin of dogs with canine visceral leishmaniasis. When Lutzomyia longipalpis were fed on abnormal skin of five naturally infected dogs 57 of 163 (35%) flies became infected: four of 65 flies (6%) became infected when fed on apparently normal skin. The bite of a single sandfly that had fed seven days previously on a naturally infected dog transmitted the infection to a young dog from a non-endemic area. Within 22 days a lesion had developed at the site of the infective bite (inner ear): 98 days after infection organisms had not disseminated throughout the skin, bone marrow, spleen or liver and the animal was still serologically negative by indirect immunofluorescence and dot-enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. When fed Lu. longipalpis were captured from a kennel with a sick dog known to be infected, 33 out of 49 (67%) of flies contained promastigotes. In contrast only two infections were detected among more than 200 sandflies captured in houses. These observations confirm the ease of transmissibility of L. chagasi from dog to sandfly to dog in Teresina. It is likely that canine VL is the major source of human VL by the transmission route dog-sandfly-human. The Lmet2 DNA probe was a useful epidemiological tool for detecting L. chagasi in sandflies.
Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 1984
Air C. Barretto; César Augusto Cuba Cuba; Julio A. Vexenat; Ana de Cássia Rosa; Philip Davis Marsden; Albino Verçosa de Magalhães
During a survey of domestic and hunting dogs conducted in the Tres Bracos region, State of Bahia, 3,0% of 98 dogs had amastigotes in skin lesions. Parasites were not found in normal ear skin. In a nonrandomly selected sample of 13 dogs with active cutaneous lesions, infection was confirmed in nine (69,2%). Tissue biopsies from seven dog lesions produced infection in hamsters. The biological behaviour of the parasite (rate of growth in culture media, evolution of lesions in hamsters and development in the gut of Lutzomyia longipalpis,) identified it to the Leishmania braziliensis complex. Characterization by biochemical means (eletrophoretic mobility of enzymes in cellulose acetate plates) and immunotaxonomic studies (monoclonal antibodies) defined the strains as L. braziliensis braziliensis. The role of dogs as a possible reservoir host of L. b. braziliensis in Tres Bracos region is discussed.
Veterinary Parasitology | 1998
Julio A. Vexenat; S.L Croft; J.H Furtado Campos; Michael A. Miles
Buparvaquone (Butalex), a therapeutic for theileriosis, has been shown to have anti-leishmanial activity in vitro. Seven dogs with symptomatic, parasitologically positive, canine visceral leishmaniosis were treated with Butalex at 5 mg kg(-1) body weight using four doses over 12 days. Two animals showed minor clinical improvement (growth of healthy hair) but all remained parasitologically positive and disease progression was not halted.
Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1986
Julio A. Vexenat; Air C. Barretto; Ana de Cássia Rosa; Christiane C Sales; Albino Verçosa de Magalhães
In Corte de Pedra, Valença, state of Bahia, a donkey, Equus asinus, was found naturally infected with Leishmania braziliensis braziliensis. The parasite was isolated from a lesion located on a castration scar, and identified by means of monoclonal antibodies.
Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 1985
Air C. Barretto; Norman E. Peterson; Ednaldo L. Lago; Ana de Cássia Rosa; Rosely S. M Braga; César Augusto Cuba Cuba; Julio A. Vexenat; Philip Davis Marsden
Three isolates of Leishmania were recovered from five of 27 specimens of the rodent Proechimys iheringi denigratus Moojen captured near Tres Bracos in the Atlantic Forest region of Bahia, Brazil. Two of these isolates were recovered from hamsters inoculated with a pooled triturate of liver, spleen and skin tissue from apparently healthy P. i. denigratus. The third isolate was recovered from a triturate of only skin tissue from another. Metastasis was observed in the inoculated hamsters, the parasites grew abundantly in artificial media and a typical suprapylarial pattern of infection in Lutzomyia longipalpis was produced indicating that the parasites belong to the Leishmania mexicana complex. All isolates reacted with Leishmania mexicana mexicana and Leishmania mexicana amazonensis monoclonal antibodies. The isoenzyme analysis differentiated these isolates from standard isolates of L. m. mexicana, L. m. amazonensis, L. m. aristedesi, L. m. pifanoi, L. m. garnhami and L. m. ssp.(Goias-W. Barbosa). These isolates seem to be a subspecies of L. mexicana very closely related to L. m. amazonensis from which they differ by decreased electrophoretic mobility of GPI, PEP and ALAT. This is the first record of the isolation of a parasite of thegenus Leishmania in a rodent captured in the State of Bahia.
Journal of Parasitology | 1988
Norman E. Peterson; Maria Augusta F. Costa; Julio A. Vexenat; Eduardo Martins Netto; Philip Davis Marsden; Albino Verçosa de Magalhães; Air C. Barretto
Leishmania (Viannia) braziliensis has never been isolated from wild animals although it is apparently capable of inducing infections in man, dogs, and donkeys. An analysis of the standard hamster culture system for analyzing infectivity of Leishmania sp. was undertaken. Results indicate that for L. (V.) braziliensis, routine cultivation of aspirates taken from the inoculation sites of 1-mo-infected hamsters should be undertaken. Moreover, in at least 1 of the 3 strains examined, isolation of the parasite was only achieved after 84 days of cultivation.
Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1986
Air C. Barretto; Julio A. Vexenat; Norman E. Peterson
Several species of wild caught sand flies were collected in the same site where a subspecies of Leishmania mexicana was isolated from the rodent Proechimys iheringi denigratus. The absence of natural infection in these sand flies permitted us to test, with relative assurance, the susceptibility of wild caught females to infection by this parasite. The success obtained in these experimental infections suggest that one or more of the sand fly species encountered in high numbers in the same site where the infected rodents were captured may be the vector(s) of this subspecies of L. mexicana.
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1998
Julio A. Vexenat; P L Olliaro; J. A. Fonseca de Castro; Rodolfo C. Cavalcante; J. H. Furtado Campos; João Tavares; Michael A. Miles